Abstract

Larvae of the ground beetle genus Eustra Schmidt-Goebel are described and illustrated for the first time and some biological notes are reported. One specimen of an unknown Eustra species was collected while excavating a nest of the ant Pachycondyla javana Mayr, in Taiwan, which is the first report of a paussine associated with a member of the ant subfamily Ponerinae. Several larvae and adults of a second species, Eustra chinensis Bänninger, were collected in Shanghai under bark with no association with ants. First instar larvae of the latter species were also reared in the lab. The occurrence of larvae of the genus Eustra both inside and outside ant nests, together with a report of adults collected inside a nest in Taiwan, suggests that members of this genus may be facultative predators or facultative symbionts of ants, an attribute that has never been reported for this genus. The larvae of Eustra show several unique features, including a peculiar bidentate mandibular apex, an extremely long galea, one of two tarsal claws greatly reduced, abdominal setae (including those of terminal disk) elongate and clavate at apex, urogomphi wide and flattened, and inflated sensilla S-I. Larvae were studied by both optical and scanning electron microscopy, their morphological features are compared with those of other described Paussinae larvae, and their potential phylogenetic and functional significance are discussed.

Highlights

  • Eustra Schmidt-Goebel is an ozaenine genus (Carabidae: Paussinae) containing twenty-two species

  • Many Eustra species live in caves and exhibit typical structural adaptations to a troglobitic life, including loss of pigmentation, loss of eyes, and long, delicate appendages

  • Both adults and larvae of Eustra chinensis Bänninger were collected in Shanghai while they were hibernating in rotting wood and a single larva of an unidentified species of Eustra was collected during the excavation of nests of the ant Pachycondyla javana Mayr in Taiwan, suggesting for the first time that at least some species of Eustra are facultatively associated with ants (Moore 2006)

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Summary

Introduction

Eustra Schmidt-Goebel is an ozaenine genus (Carabidae: Paussinae) containing twenty-two species (reviewed by Deuve 2001). Adults in this Southeast Asian genus have the smallest body size of all members of the subfamily Paussinae. Many Eustra species live in caves and exhibit typical structural adaptations to a troglobitic life, including loss of pigmentation, loss of eyes, and long, delicate appendages. Other species are not cave-dwelling, but rather they have been collected in microhabitats typical of other ozaenines including under rocks and under bark. Larvae of two species of Eustra were collected in the field. Both adults and larvae of Eustra chinensis Bänninger were collected in Shanghai while they were hibernating in rotting wood and a single larva of an unidentified species of Eustra was collected during the excavation of nests of the ant Pachycondyla javana Mayr in Taiwan, suggesting for the first time that at least some species of Eustra are facultatively associated with ants (Moore 2006)

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