Collops tricolor

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Collops tricolor
Scientific classification OOjs UI icon edit-ltr.svg
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Coleoptera
Suborder: Polyphaga
Infraorder: Cucujiformia
Family: Melyridae
Subfamily: Malachiinae
Tribe: Malachiini
Genus: Collops
Species:
C. tricolor
Binomial name
Collops tricolor
(Say, 1823)
Synonyms(Schaeffer/Fall, 1912)

Collops sublimbatus

Collops tricolor, also known as the black-headed melyrid or the tri-colored soft-winged flower beetle, is a species of soft-winged flower beetle in the family Melyridae. It is found in North America. [1]

Contents

Description

Adults measure 3.5-4mm in length. Head, undersides, and legs are black. [2] Labrum and polished thorax are rufous while the antennae are pale rufous becoming dusky at the tips. [2] Dark bluish-green to violet elytra, with the margins sometimes rufous in the middle and the suture less often partly rufous. [2]

Male

Elytra are shiny. The basal joints of the antennae are triangular and broad, being virtually equal in width and length. [2]

Female

Elytra are duller. Further west, the female type is virtually indistinguishable from other species (e.g., C. vicarius) without an associating male. [2]

Polymorphism

Collops sublimbatus on outcrop - female (left) and males (right) Collops sublimbatus.jpg
Collops sublimbatus on outcrop - female (left) and males (right)

Collops sublimbatus was described as its own species by Schaeffer in 1912 from specimens collected near the top of Black Rock Mountain in Rabun County, Georgia. [3] It is virtually the same as C. tricolor, except that the elytral margins and suture are always entirely rufous. [2] Fall indicates that this "species" is a probable variety or color phase of C. tricolor, by the fact that some C. tricolor specimens have varying amounts of rufous on the margins and suture and thus "bridge the gap" between the two types. [3] [2] Nomina Insecta Nearctica lists C.sublimbatus as a synonym of C. tricolor. [4]

Similar species

C. vicarius is indistingishable from C. tricolor, except that the basal triangular joint of the male's antennae is not as broad, but is 1/2 longer than wide. [2] However, Henry Fall, who described the species in 1912 from a specimen from Indiana, noted that more study is needed to distinguish these species. [2]

C. nigriceps, found along the coastlines of the Atlantic and Gulf Coast, from Massachusetts to Alabama, is similar to C. tricolor, but is distinguished by a large dark spot on the rufous thorax, a longer thorax proportionally, and the thighs sometimes being rufous. [2] [1] However, the spot is often absent in the floridanus variety, and thus, it is more reliably separated by the male's third antennal joint. [2]

C. parvus is superficially similar in color but smaller (3mm) and narrower towards the front since the thorax is half as wide as the elytra. [2] [5] The antennae and legs are also different; it has black thighs and rufous tibiae and tarsi. [2] Inhabits parts of the Southwestern United States. [2]

C. georgianus can be confused with C. sublimbatus type, but the head and prothorax of the latter are shiny and hardly punctuate, and the head, legs, and undersides are black. [5] The antennae between these species are almost the same. [2]

Distribution

Locally common from Quebec to Virginia becoming scarcer to the west of this region. [2] The range of the C. sublimbatus type includes Alabama, North and South Carolina, and the Appalachian Mountains in Georgia, with C. georgianus occupying outcrops in the north central part of Georgia. [6]

References

  1. 1 2 Say, Thomas (October 22, 1823). "Descriptions of Coleoptaerous Insects Collected in the late Expedition to the Rocky Mountains, performed by Order of Mr. Calhoun, Secretary of War, under Command of Major Long". Journal of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. 3: 184–185 – via Google Books.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Fall, H. C. (1912). "A Review of the North American Species of Collops (Col.)". Journal of the New York Entomological Society. 20. Pasadena, CA: New York Entomological Society: 249 - 274 – via Biodiversity Heritage Library.
  3. 1 2 Miscellaneous Notes. (1916). Journal of the New York Entomological Society, 24(2), 153–154. http://www.jstor.org/stable/25003710
  4. Poole, R. W., and P. Gentili (eds.). 1996. Nomina Insecta Nearctica: a checklist of the insects of North America. Volume 1 (Coleoptera, Strepsiptera). Entomological Information Services, Rockville, MD.
  5. 1 2 Schaeffer, Charles (June 1912). "New Species of the Coleopterous Genus Collops". The Canadian Entomologist. 44 (6): 187 via Biodiversity Heritage Library.
  6. King, Patricia Smith (1987). "Macro- and Microgeographic Structure of a Spatially Subdivided Beetle Species in Nature". Evolution. 41 (2): 401–416. doi:10.2307/2409147. JSTOR 2409147. PMID 28568758.