Doru aculeatum

Doru aculeatum
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Dermaptera
Family: Forficulidae
Genus: Doru
Species: D. aculeatum
Binomial name
Doru aculeatum
Scudder, 1876

Doru aculeatum, the spine-tailed earwig, is an insect in the family Forficulidae.[1]:144 This earwig is found in the woods and grassy areas of eastern North America and occurs at outdoor lights at night.[2]:55

The adults have a brown body with pale markings. The male has a short thorn-like spine in between the cerci on the 10th segment of the abdomen.[1]:144

It is the only native species of earwig in the north of the United States and is found as far north as Canada, where it hides in the leaf axils of emerging plants in southern Ontario wetlands.

Description

As given in W.S.Blatchley's Orthoptera of Northeastern America - with especial reference to the Faunas of Indiana and Florida (1920):[2]

Dark chesnut brown; palpi, legs, edges of pronotum and outer two-thirds of tegmina yellow. Pronotum longer than broad, narrower than head. Tegmina nearly twice as long as pronotum, truncate; inner wings usually aborted. Forceps of male, three-fourths as long as abdomen slender, curved, bent down ward a little at basal third, becoming again hor-izontal a little before the tip, a pointed tooth pre-sent at second bend; of female shorter than those of male, their legs nearly straight, the lower inner edges very finely crenulate and usually contiguous for most of their length, the tips incurved. Length of body, <J, 811, 9, 7.510; of tegmina, $ and 9, 2.53: of forceps, $ , 4.76, 9, 33.5; of Fig. 29. Dom acu- pygidial spine, $ , .8 1 mm.

References

  1. 1 2 Robinson, William H. (2005). Handbook of urban insects and arachnids. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. p. 480. ISBN 978-0-521-81253-5.
  2. 1 2 Blatchley, W. S. (1920). Orthoptera of Northeastern America - with especial reference to the Faunas of Indiana and Florida. Indianapolis, U.S.A.: The Nature Publishing Company. p. 784.

External resources


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.