Date:
November 5, 2015
Source:
Entomological Society of America
A
new species of whirligig beetle is the first to be described in the United
States since 1991. Grey Gustafson, a PhD student at the University of New
Mexico, and Dr. Robert Sites, an entomologist at the University of Missouri's
Enns Entomology Museum, describe the new species in an article appearing in
the Annals of the Entomological Society of America.
Whirligig
beetles belong to the family Gyrinidae and are well known for their whirling
swimming pattern. Gustafson found the new species in Alabama's Conecuh National
Forest while hunting for similar whirligig beetles, and he noticed that they
looked very similar to specimens in the Enns Entomology Museum that had not yet
been identified.
"Dr.
Sites noticed that in the museum's collection there were 11 specimens of a
whirligig beetle collected back in the 1970s and identified by somebody -- they
don't know who -- as possibly being a new species," Gustafson said.
"He contacted me because he knew I was working on a paper to help people
identify the North American whirligig beetle species in the
genus Dineutus."
Gustafson
confirmed that the 11 museum specimens were members of a new species, and that
they were the same species as the specimens he had recently collected in
Alabama.
"When
I got back and checked my samples, sure enough, it was the same species,"
he said. "It was lucky that somebody had originally noticed that this was
potentially new, and that the natural history collection was around to preserve
the specimens and that Dr. Sites contacted me. And then it was even more
serendipitous that I happened to stumble upon it."
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