identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
B3C8B92ECFA42F9AB4F2A2927828E5FA.text	B3C8B92ECFA42F9AB4F2A2927828E5FA.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Grynocharis quadrilineata (Melsheimer 1844) Melsheimer 1844	<div><p>Grynocharis quadrilineata (Melsheimer, 1844) Map 1</p><p>Material examined.</p><p>New Brunswick, Carleton Co., Meduxnekeag Valley Nature Preserve, 46.1907°N, 67.6740°W, 20.VI.2006, R. P. Webster, mature mixed forest, in Pleurotus sp. on dead standing Populus sp. (1, NBM); same locality and forest type but 7.VI.2007, R. P. Webster, under bark of standing dead beech (4, RWC); Jackson Falls, Bell Forest, 46.2200°N, 67.7231°W, 5-12.VII.2008, R. P. Webster, mature hardwood forest, Lindgren funnel traps (2, AFC, RWC); same locality and habitat data but 23-28.IV.2009, 28.IV-9.V.2009, 14-20.V.2009, 20-26.V.2009, 16-21.VI.2009, R. Webster &amp; M.-A. Giguère, Lindgren funnel traps (7, AFC, RWC). Queens Co., near Queenstown, 45.6904°N, 66.1455°W, 13.V.2008, R. P. Webster, old growth hardwood forest, under bark of standing dead sugar maple (1, RWC); Cranberry Lake P.N.A. (Protected Natural Area), 46.1125°N, 65.6075°W, 24.IV-5.V.2009, 5-12.V.2009, 12-21.V.2009, R. Webster &amp; M.-A. Giguère, old red oak forest, Lindgren funnel traps (4, AFC, RWC); same locality and habitat data but, 21.V.2009, R. Webster &amp; M.-A. Giguère, under bark of red oak (1, AFC); same locality data and forest type, 13-25.V.2011, 25.V-7.VI.2011, M. Roy &amp; V. Webster, Lindgren funnel traps (5, AFC, NBM). Restigouche Co., Jacquet River Gorge P.N.A., 47.804°N, 65.993°W, 13-23.VI.2009, G. J. McBriarty (2, NBM); Dionne Brook P.N.A., 47.9030°N, 68.3503°W, 30.V-15.VI.2011, M. Roy &amp; V. Webster, old-growth northern hardwood forest, Lindgren funnel traps (4, AFC, NBM). Sunbury Co., Acadia Research Forest, 45.9866°N, 66.3841°W, 19-25.V.2009, 2-9.VI.2009, 9-16.VI.2009, 24-30.VI.2009, R. Webster &amp; M.-A. Giguère, mature (110-year-old) red spruce forest with scattered red maple and balsam fir, Lindgren funnel traps (4, AFC). York Co., 15 km W of Tracy off Rt. 645, 45.6848°N, 66.8821°W, 19-25.V.2009, 21-28.VI.2009, R. Webster &amp; M.-A. Giguère, old red pine forest, Lindgren funnel traps (2, AFC); same locality and habitat data, 10-26.V.2010, 4-16.VI.2010, R. Webster &amp; C. MacKay, Lindgren funnel traps (1, AFC, RWC); same locality and habitat data, 8-20.VI.2011, M. Roy &amp; V. Webster, Lindgren funnel trap (1, NBM).</p><p>Collection and habitat data.</p><p>In New Brunswick, Grynocharis quadrilineata was found in mature and old hardwood forests with sugar maple ( Acer saccharum Marsh.) and American beech ( Fagus grandifolia Ehrh.), an old-growth northern hardwood forest with sugar maple and yellow birch ( Betula alleghaniensis Britt.), an old red oak ( Quercus rubra L.) forest, a mature (110-year-old) red spruce ( Picea rubens Sarg.) forest, and an old (180-year-old) red pine ( Pinus resinosa Ait.) forest. Adults were captured in Lindgren funnel traps in most of these forest types. Specimens with microhabitat data were collected from Pleurotus mushrooms on a dead, standing poplar ( Populus sp.), from under bark of a dead, standing American beech, from under bark of a standing, dead sugar maple, and from under bark of a red oak. This species has been reported from under bark of a dead poplar (Barron 1971). Adults were collected during April, May, June, and July in New Brunswick.</p><p>Distribution in Canada and Alaska.</p><p>MB, ON, QC, NB, NS (Bousquet 1991; Majka 2011). This species was first reported from Nova Scotia and the Maritime provinces by Majka (2011) based on one specimen and was considered regionally rare. This species appears to be widespread in New Brunswick and was commonly detected using Lindgren funnel traps.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/B3C8B92ECFA42F9AB4F2A2927828E5FA	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Webster, Reginald P.;Sweeney, Jon D.;DeMerchant, Ian	Webster, Reginald P., Sweeney, Jon D., DeMerchant, Ian (2012): New Coleoptera records from New Brunswick, Canada: Trogossitidae, Cleridae, and Melyridae, with an addition to the fauna of Nova Scotia. ZooKeys 179: 141-156, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.179.2585, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.179.2585
E318547193CA4D8F861C1E8B155834C9.text	E318547193CA4D8F861C1E8B155834C9.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Ostoma fraterna (Randall 1838) Randall 1838	<div><p>Ostoma fraterna (Randall, 1838) Map 2</p><p>Material examined.</p><p>Additional New Brunswick records. Charlotte Co., St. Stephen, 17.V.1933, J. B. O’Donnel (8, AFC). Restigouche Co., Dionne Brook P.N.A., 47.9030 °N, 68.3503°W, 30. V– 15.VI.2011, M. Roy &amp; V. Webster, old-growth northern hardwood forest, Lindgren funnel trap (1, RWC).</p><p>Collection and habitat data.</p><p>The specimen with habitat data from New Brunswick was collected from a Lindgren funnel trap deployed in an old-growth northern hardwood forest with sugar maple and yellow birch. Specimens were collected during May and June. Ostoma fraterna has been found under bark of spruce ( Picea sp.) and in various Polyporaceae species ( Piptoporus betulinus (Fr.) Kar., Spongiporus leucospongia (Cke. and Hark.) Murr., and Tyromyces fragilis (Fr.) Donk) (Barron 1971, 1996).</p><p>Distribution in Canada and Alaska.</p><p>AK, YK, NT, BC, AB, SK, ON, QC, NB, NS, NF (Bousquet 1991; Majka 2011). This uncommon species was first reported for New Brunswick by Majka (2011) based on six specimens collected by W. McIntosh in Saint John during 1902. The record from Dionne Brook Protected Natural Area is the first recent record of this species from the province.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E318547193CA4D8F861C1E8B155834C9	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Webster, Reginald P.;Sweeney, Jon D.;DeMerchant, Ian	Webster, Reginald P., Sweeney, Jon D., DeMerchant, Ian (2012): New Coleoptera records from New Brunswick, Canada: Trogossitidae, Cleridae, and Melyridae, with an addition to the fauna of Nova Scotia. ZooKeys 179: 141-156, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.179.2585, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.179.2585
68B09FA7D6DE5A54622F64FF93DBA199.text	68B09FA7D6DE5A54622F64FF93DBA199.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Thymalus marginicollis Chevrolat 1842	<div><p>Thymalus marginicollis Chevrolat, 1842 Map 3</p><p>Material examined.</p><p>Additional New Brunswick records. Carleton Co., Meduxnekeag Valley Nature Preserve, 46.1907°N, 67.6740°W, 13.VIII.2006, R. P. Webster, mature mixed forest, in polypore fungi (2, RWC); Hartland, Becaguimec Island (in Saint John River), 46.3106°N, 67.5372°W, 13.IX.2006, R. P. Webster, old mixed forest, in large dried polypore fungus (on dead standing basswood) (1, RWC); Jackson Falls, Bell Forest, 46.2200°N, 67.7231°W, 12-19.VI.2008, R. P. Webster, mature hardwood forest, Lindgren funnel trap (1, AFC); same locality and habitat data but 20-26.V.2009, 21-18.VI.2009, 31.VII-7.VIII.2009, R. Webster &amp; M.-A. Giguère, Lindgren funnel traps (4, AFC). Queens Co., Cranberry Lake P.N.A, 46.1125°N, 65.6075°W, 18-25.VI.2009, 21-27.V.2009, 5-11.VI.2009, 11-18.VI.2009, R. Webster &amp; M.-A. Giguère, mature red oak forest, Lindgren funnel traps (5, AFC); same locality data and forest type, 25.V-7.VI.2011, M. Roy &amp; V. Webster, Lindgren funnel trap (1, NBM). Restigouche, Co., Dionne Brook P.N.A., 47.9030°N, 68.3503°W, 30.V-15.VI.2011, M. Roy &amp; V. Webster, old-growth northern hardwood forest, Lindgren funnel traps (3, AFC, NBM); same locality and collectors but 47.9064°N, 68.3441°W, 15-27.VI.2011, old-growth white spruce and balsam fir forest, Lindgren funnel trap (1, NBM). Sunbury Co., Acadia Research Forest, 45.9866°N, 66.3841°W, 2-9.VI.2009, R. Webster &amp; M.-A. Giguère, mature (110-year-old) red spruce forest with scattered red maple and balsam fir, Lindgren funnel traps (2, AFC). York Co., near Browns Mountain Fen, 45.8876°N, 67.6560°W, 3.VIII.2006, R. P. Webster, mature hardwood forest, in slightly dried Pleurotis sp. on sugar maple (4, NBM, RWC); Charters Settlement, 45.8286 °N, 66.7365°W, 25.VII.2006, R. P. Webster, mixed forest, in polypore fungi on dead (standing) beech (1, RWC); 15 km W of Tracy off Rt. 645, 45.6848°N, 66.8821°W, 1-8.VI.2009, R. Webster &amp; M.-A. Giguère, old red pine forest, Lindgren funnel traps (3, AFC).</p><p>Collection and habitat data.</p><p>Thymalus marginicollis was collected in Lindgren funnel traps in hardwood forests with sugar maple and American beech, an old-growth northern hardwood forest with sugar maple and yellow birch, an old red oak forest, mixed forests, a mature red spruce forest, and an old red pine forest. Adults were also collected from a large, dried polypore fungus on a dead, standing basswood ( Tilia americana L.), in a slightly dried Pleurotus mushroom on a dead, standing sugar maple, and from a polypore fungi on a dead, standing American beech tree. Barron (1971) reported this species from various polypore species and Majka (2011) reported that it was commonly captured in flight-intercept traps and on the polypore, Piptoporus betulinus (Fr.) Kar., growing on white birch ( Betula papyrifera Marsh.) in Nova Scotia. Adults were captured during May, June, July, August, and September.</p><p>Distribution in Canada and Alaska.</p><p>BC, AB, SK, MB, ON, QC, NB, NS, PE, NF (Bousquet 1991; Majka 2011). Thymalus marginicollis was first reported from New Brunswick by Majka (2011) on the basis of one specimen collected by D.F. McAlpine on Todd’s Island (Charlotte Co.) during 2000. This species is common and widespread in New Brunswick and was most commonly detected using Lindgren funnel traps.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/68B09FA7D6DE5A54622F64FF93DBA199	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Webster, Reginald P.;Sweeney, Jon D.;DeMerchant, Ian	Webster, Reginald P., Sweeney, Jon D., DeMerchant, Ian (2012): New Coleoptera records from New Brunswick, Canada: Trogossitidae, Cleridae, and Melyridae, with an addition to the fauna of Nova Scotia. ZooKeys 179: 141-156, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.179.2585, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.179.2585
7A7DFC885587389DC2D626B76F4EBA38.text	7A7DFC885587389DC2D626B76F4EBA38.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Calitys scabra (Thunberg 1784) Thunberg 1784	<div><p>Calitys scabra (Thunberg, 1784) Map 4</p><p>Material examined.</p><p>Additional New Brunswick records. Queens Co., Cranberry Lake P.N.A, 46.1125°N, 65.6075°W, 21-27.V.2009, R. Webster &amp; M.-A. Giguère, old red oak forest, Lindgren funnel trap (1, RWC); same locality and habitat data, 25. V– 7.VI.2011, 29. VI– 7.VII.2011, M. Roy &amp; V. Webster, Lindgren funnel traps (2, NBM, RWC). Sunbury Co., Acadia Research Forest, 11.VI.2008, Brawn/Harrison (2, AFC); same locality but 45.9866°N, 66.3841°W, 13-19.V.2009, 19-25.V.2009, 25.V-2.VI.2009, R. Webster &amp; M.-A. Giguère, mature (110-year-old) red spruce forest with scattered red maple and balsam fir, Lindgren funnel traps (3, AFC, RWC). York Co., 14 km WSW of Tracy, S of Rt. 645, 45.6741°N, 66.8661°W, 10-26.V.2010, R. Webster &amp; C. MacKay, old mixed forest with red and white spruce, red and white pine, balsam fir, eastern white cedar, red maple, and Populus sp., Lindgren funnel trap (1, RWC); 15 km W of Tracy off Rt. 645, 45.6848°N, 66.8821°W, 30.V-8.VI.2011, 8-20.VI.2011, M. Roy &amp; V. Webster, old red pine forest, Lindgren funnel traps (6, AFC, NBM, RWC).</p><p>Collection and habitat data.</p><p>Calitys scabra was captured in Lindgren funnel traps deployed in an old red oak forest, a mature red spruce stand, an old-growth red pine forest, and an old mixed forest. This species was reported from under bark of dead pine and from Fomitopsis pinicola (Fr.) Kar. (Barron 1971). Adults were collected during May, June, and July.</p><p>Distribution in Canada and Alaska.</p><p>AK, NT, BC, AB, MB, ON, QC, NB, NS (Bousquet 1991; Majka 2011). Majka (2011) reported this Holarctic species for the first time from New Brunswick based on a specimen collected by W. McIntosh in Saint John, ca. 1900. The above records are the first recent records of this species for New Brunswick.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/7A7DFC885587389DC2D626B76F4EBA38	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Webster, Reginald P.;Sweeney, Jon D.;DeMerchant, Ian	Webster, Reginald P., Sweeney, Jon D., DeMerchant, Ian (2012): New Coleoptera records from New Brunswick, Canada: Trogossitidae, Cleridae, and Melyridae, with an addition to the fauna of Nova Scotia. ZooKeys 179: 141-156, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.179.2585, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.179.2585
A9D6466158749F5F5E3167F7943EB71C.text	A9D6466158749F5F5E3167F7943EB71C.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Tenebroides corticalis (Melsheimer 1844) Melsheimer 1844	<div><p>Tenebroides corticalis (Melsheimer, 1844) Map 5</p><p>Material examined.</p><p>New Brunswick, Carleton Co.,Jackson Falls,Bell Forest, 46.2200°N, 67.7231°W, 23-28.IV.2009, 20-26.V.2009, 8-16.VI.2009, R. P. Webster &amp; M.-A. Giguère, mature hardwood forest, Lindgren funnel traps (4, AFC, RWC). Queens Co., Cranberry Lake P.N.A, 46.1125°N, 65.6075°W, 24.IV-5.V.2009, 5-12.V.2009, 12-21.V.2009, 21-27.V.2009, R. Webster &amp; M.-A. Giguère, old red oak forest, Lindgren funnel traps (11, AFC, RWC); same locality data and forest type, 13-25.V.2011, 25.V-7.VI.2011, M. Roy &amp; V. Webster, Lindgren funnel traps (3, NBM). Sunbury Co., Acadia Research Forest, 45.9866°N, 66.3841°W, 16-24.VI.2009, 24-30.VI.2009, 13-21.VII.2009, R. Webster &amp; M.-A. Giguère, mature (110- year-old) red spruce forest with scattered red maple and balsam fir, Lindgren funnel traps (4, AFC). York Co.,Charters Settlement, 45.8340°N, 66.7450°W, 2.IV.2005, R. P. Webster, mixed forest, in moss and lichens on tree trunk (1, RWC); same locality and collector but 45.8267°N, 66.7343°W, 16.IV.2005, Carex marsh, in litter and sphagnum at base of tree (1, RWC); Nashwaaksis River at Rt. 105, 45.9850°N, 66.6900°W, 6.V.2006, R. P. Webster, river margin in flood debris on upper river margin (1, RWC).</p><p>Collection and habitat data.</p><p>Tenebroides corticalis was captured in Lindgren funnel traps deployed in both deciduous and coniferous forests in New Brunswick. These included a mature hardwood forest with sugar maple, American beech, and white ash ( Fraxinus americana L.), an old red oak forest, a mixed forest, and a mature red spruce forest. Adults were also collected from moss and lichens on a tree trunk, in litter and sphagnum at the base of a tree in a Carex marsh, and in flood debris on the upper margin of a river. Barron (1971) reported this species from under bark of various hardwood species, spruce, and pine. Adults were collected during April, May, June, and July in New Brunswick.</p><p>Distribution in Canada and Alaska.</p><p>AK, YK, NT, BC, SK, MB, ON, QC, NB, NS (Bousquet 1991; Majka 2011). Majka (2011) newly recorded this species from the Maritime provinces on the basis of two records from Nova Scotia.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/A9D6466158749F5F5E3167F7943EB71C	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Webster, Reginald P.;Sweeney, Jon D.;DeMerchant, Ian	Webster, Reginald P., Sweeney, Jon D., DeMerchant, Ian (2012): New Coleoptera records from New Brunswick, Canada: Trogossitidae, Cleridae, and Melyridae, with an addition to the fauna of Nova Scotia. ZooKeys 179: 141-156, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.179.2585, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.179.2585
2BC5D9D1C25C364FBA05EA9A2DC9C8C6.text	2BC5D9D1C25C364FBA05EA9A2DC9C8C6.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Zenodosus sanguineus (Say 1835) Say 1835	<div><p>Zenodosus sanguineus (Say, 1835) Map 6</p><p>Material examined.</p><p>Additional New Brunswick records. Carleton Co.,Jackson Falls,Bell Forest, 46.2200°N, 67.7231°W, 13.VIII.2006, R. P. Webster, hardwood forest, in decaying fleshy polypore fungi (1, RWC); same locality data, collector, and forest type, 6.V.2007, in partially dried polypore fungus on dead tree (1, RWC); same locality data, collector, and forest type, 4-12.VI.2008, Lindgren funnel trap (1, AFC); same locality and forest type but 23-28.IV.2009, R. P. Webster &amp; M.-A. Giguère, mature hardwood forest, Lindgren funnel traps (4, AFC); Meduxnekeag Valley Nature Preserve, 46.1900°N, 67.6700°W, 7.VI.2007, R. P. Webster, hardwood forest, under bark of standing dead beech (1, RWC). Charlotte Co., 10 km NW of New River Beach, 45.2110°N, 66.6170°W, 15-29.VI.2010, R. Webster &amp; C. MacKay, old growth eastern white cedar forest, Lindgren funnel trap (1, RWC). Northumberland Co., 12.0 km SSE of Upper Napan near Goodfellow Brook, 46.8943°N, 65.3810°W, 23.V.2007, R. P. Webster, recent clearcut, under bark of spruce log (1, RWC). Queens Co., Grand Lake near Scotchtown, 46.8762°N, 66.1816°W, 30.IV.2006, R. P. Webster, oak forest, under bark of oak (1, RWC); same locality data, collector, and forest type, 19.IX.2006, in decayed log covered with gilled mushrooms and polypore fungi (1, RWC); Cran berry Lake P.N.A, 46.1125°N, 65.6075°W, 24.IV-5.V.2009, 12-21.V.2009, R. Webster &amp; M.-A. Giguère, old red oak forest, Lindgren funnel traps (5, AFC); Grand Lake Meadows P.N.A., 45.8227°N, 66.1209°W, 4-19.V.2010, 19-31.V.2010, R. Webster, C. MacKay, M. Laity, &amp; R. Johns, old silver maple forest with green ash and seasonally flooded marsh, Lindgren funnel traps (2, AFC). Restigouche, Co., Dionne Brook P .N.A., 47.9030°N, 68.3503°W, 31.V-15.VI.2011, M. Roy &amp; V. Webster, old-growth northern hardwood forest, Lindgren funnel traps (3, AFC, NBM); same locality and collectors but 30.V-15.VI.2011, old-growth white spruce and balsam fir forest, Lindgren funnel traps (4, AFC, NBM). Sunbury Co., Acadia Research Forest, 45.9866°N, 66.3841°W, 13-19.V.2009, R. Webster &amp; M.-A. Giguère, mature (110-year-old) red spruce forest with scattered red maple and balsam fir, Lindgren funnel traps (3, AFC). York Co., Charters Settlement, 45.8340°N, 66.7450°W, 20.V.2007, R. P. Webster, mature mixed forest, in polypore fungi on Populus log (1, RWC); Canterbury near Browns Mtn. Fen, 45.8876°N, 67.6560°W, 3.VIII.2006, R. P. Webster, hardwood forest, on slightly dried Pleurotus sp. on sugar maple (1, RWC); 15 km W of Tracy off Rt. 645, 45.6848°N, 66.8821°W, 25.IV-4.V.2009, 25.V-1.VI.2009, 1-8.VI.2009, 15-21.VI.2009, R. Webster &amp; M.-A. Giguère, old red pine forest, Lindgren funnel traps (4, AFC); Charters Settlement, 45.8395°N, 66.7391°W, 1-5.VI.2011, R. P. Webster, mixed forest, flight intercept trap (1, NBM).</p><p>Collection and habitat data.</p><p>In New Brunswick, this species was captured in Lindgren funnel traps deployed in various deciduous and coniferous forest types. These included a mature hardwood forest, an old red oak forest, an old silver maple ( Acer saccharinum L.) forest, an old-growth northern hardwood forest, a mature mixed forest, an old red pine forest, a mature red spruce forest, an old-growth eastern white cedar forest, and an old-growth white spruce ( Picea glauca (Moench) Voss) and balsam fir ( Abies balsamea (L.) Mill.) forest. Adults with micro-habitat data were collected from decaying fleshy polypore fungi and a partially dried polypore fungus on dead, standing trees, in a decayed log covered with gilled mushrooms and polypore fungi, on a slightly dried Pleurotus sp. on a sugar maple, in a polypore fungi on a Populu s log, under bark of a dead, standing American beech tree, and under bark of a spruce and a red oak log. Adults were collected during April, May, June, August, and September.</p><p>Distribution in Canada and Alaska.</p><p>ON, QC, NB, NS, PE (McNamara 1991; Majka 2006). Majka (2006) reported this species for the first time from New Brunswick on the basis of one specimen from Fredericton (York Co.) collected in 1987. This species is common and widespread in the province based on these collections.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/2BC5D9D1C25C364FBA05EA9A2DC9C8C6	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Webster, Reginald P.;Sweeney, Jon D.;DeMerchant, Ian	Webster, Reginald P., Sweeney, Jon D., DeMerchant, Ian (2012): New Coleoptera records from New Brunswick, Canada: Trogossitidae, Cleridae, and Melyridae, with an addition to the fauna of Nova Scotia. ZooKeys 179: 141-156, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.179.2585, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.179.2585
F7B44D26A8A0C4CFCE9AAA2398F43CAA.text	F7B44D26A8A0C4CFCE9AAA2398F43CAA.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Cymatodera bicolor (Say 1825) Say 1825	<div><p>Cymatodera bicolor (Say, 1825) Map 7</p><p>Material examined.</p><p>New Brunswick, Carleton Co., Meduxnekeag Valley Nature Preserve, 46.1957°N, 67.6803°W, 10.VI.2005, R. P. Webster, mixed forest, u.v. light trap (1, RWC). Queens Co., Cranberry Lake P.N.A, 46.1125°N, 65.6075°W, 29.VI-7.VII.2011, 20.VII-4.VIII.2011, M. Roy &amp; V. Webster, old red oak forest, Lindgren funnel traps in forest canopy (8, AFC, NBM, RWC); Grand Lake Mead ows P.N.A., 45.8227°N, 66.1209°W, 21.VI-5.VII.2011, M Roy &amp; V. Webster, old silver maple forest and seasonally flooded marsh, Lindgren funnel trap in forest canopy (1, RWC).</p><p>Collection and habitat data.</p><p>One specimen from New Brunswick was captured in an ultraviolet light trap in a mixed forest area. Others were captured in Lindgren funnel traps deployed in the canopy of red oaks in an old red oak forest and in the canopy of a silver maple in a silver maple forest. Adults were captured during June, July, and August.</p><p>Distribution in Canada and Alaska.</p><p>ON, QC, NB, NS (McNamara 1991). Only one previous specimen of this species was known from the Maritime provinces (Kings Co., Kentville, specimen in CNC) (Majka 2006). Majka (2006) considered this specimen was either from an isolated population in Annapolis Valley of Nova Scotia or a wind-blown stray.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/F7B44D26A8A0C4CFCE9AAA2398F43CAA	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Webster, Reginald P.;Sweeney, Jon D.;DeMerchant, Ian	Webster, Reginald P., Sweeney, Jon D., DeMerchant, Ian (2012): New Coleoptera records from New Brunswick, Canada: Trogossitidae, Cleridae, and Melyridae, with an addition to the fauna of Nova Scotia. ZooKeys 179: 141-156, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.179.2585, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.179.2585
E8F61829A338FCCB6BD13BBAF35B47D4.text	E8F61829A338FCCB6BD13BBAF35B47D4.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Attalus morulus (LeConte 1852) **	<div><p>Attalus morulus (LeConte, 1852)** Map 9</p><p>Material examined.</p><p>New Brunswick, Northumberland Co., Blueberry Rd., off Hwy 8, 47.3210°N, 65.4229°W, 24.VII.2005, R. P. Webster, jack pine forest, on foliage of jack pine (1, RWC). York Co., 15 km W of Tracy off Rt. 645, 45.6848°N, 66.8821°W, 29. VII– 4.VIII.2009, R. Webster &amp; M.-A. Giguère, old red pine forest, Lindgren funnel trap (1, RWC); same locality data and forest type, 13-27.VII.2010, R. Webster &amp; C. MacKay, Lindgren funnel traps (2, AFC, RWC).</p><p>Collection and habitat data.</p><p>Attalus morulus were captured in Lindgren funnel traps deployed in an old-growth red pine forest. One individual was collected from foliage of jack pine ( Pinus banksiana Lamb.) in a jack pine forest. Adults were captured during July and August.</p><p>Distribution in Canada and Alaska.</p><p>BC, QC, NB (Bright 1991). Attalus morulus was previously reported from Connecticut and New York, in northeastern USA (Downie and Arnett 1996).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E8F61829A338FCCB6BD13BBAF35B47D4	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Webster, Reginald P.;Sweeney, Jon D.;DeMerchant, Ian	Webster, Reginald P., Sweeney, Jon D., DeMerchant, Ian (2012): New Coleoptera records from New Brunswick, Canada: Trogossitidae, Cleridae, and Melyridae, with an addition to the fauna of Nova Scotia. ZooKeys 179: 141-156, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.179.2585, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.179.2585
80C823EDA73DD4380793E1D25F3AD9D9.text	80C823EDA73DD4380793E1D25F3AD9D9.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Thanasimus formicarius Linnaeus 1758	<div><p>Thanasimus formicarius Linnaeus, 1758** Map 8</p><p>Material examined.</p><p>Nova Scotia, Halifax Co., (Halifax) Point Pleasant Park, 44.6226°N, 63.5689°W, 11.VII.2001, 8.VIII.2001, J. Sweeney, Lindgren funnel traps, tree blend lure (2, AFC, CNC). Quebec, Berthierville, late 1940's, Frère Adrien Robert (UMC).</p><p>Collection and habitat data.</p><p>In Europe, Thanasimus formicarius is a well-known predator of bark beetles (Weslien and Regnander 1992). Two adults from Nova Scotia were captured in Lindgren funnel traps baited with tree blend lure (spruce volatiles) and EtOH deployed in a red spruce stand. Adults were collected during July and August.</p><p>Distribution in Canada and Alaska.</p><p>QC, NS. This old-world species was introduced into North America to control the bark beetle, Dendroctonus frontalis Zimmermann in 1892 and in the late 1900s (Opitz 2002). It is not known if this species is established in Nova Scotia or if these specimens represents an interception of individuals that may have emerged from softwood packing material used as dunnage in shipping containers arriving in the port of Halifax from Europe. No additional specimens have been collected at or near this site despite extensive trapping from 2001-2011 in the Halifax–Dartmouth area with similarly baited funnel traps or black-panel intercept traps (Alpha Scents, Portland, OR). There is also a specimen in the Ouellet-Robert Collection ( Université de Montréal) from Berthierville, Quebec, collected by A. Robert in the 1940s during his studies on Dutch elm disease (Serge Laplante, personal communication). There have been no additional specimens reported from Quebec.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/80C823EDA73DD4380793E1D25F3AD9D9	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Webster, Reginald P.;Sweeney, Jon D.;DeMerchant, Ian	Webster, Reginald P., Sweeney, Jon D., DeMerchant, Ian (2012): New Coleoptera records from New Brunswick, Canada: Trogossitidae, Cleridae, and Melyridae, with an addition to the fauna of Nova Scotia. ZooKeys 179: 141-156, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.179.2585, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.179.2585
08B2ED995FF14C92459CA737A9830BB8.text	08B2ED995FF14C92459CA737A9830BB8.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Dolichosoma foveicolle (Kirby 1837) **	<div><p>Dolichosoma foveicolle (Kirby, 1837)** Map 10</p><p>Material examined.</p><p>New Brunswick, Albert Co., Shepody N.W.A., Mary’s Point Section, 45.7320°N, 64.6765°W, 16.VI.2004, R. P. Webster, margin of salt marsh near for est, sweeping (1, RWC). Gloucester Co., near Acadian Historical Village, 47.7873°N, 65.0756°W, 29.VI.2006, R. P. Webster, inland margin of salt marsh, sweeping vegetation (6, NBM, RWC). Sunbury Co., Burton, near Sunpoke Lake, 45.7662°N, 66.5526°W, 20.VI.2007, R. P. Webster, seasonally flooded marsh, sweeping vegetation (1, RWC). York Co., Mazerolle Settlement, 45.8765°N, 66.8260°W, 8.VI.2008, R. P. Webster, beaver meadow, sweeping vegetation along brook margin (2, RWC).</p><p>Collection and habitat data.</p><p>Adults were found in June on the inner margin of salt marshes, seasonally flooded (freshwater) marshes, and in a beaver meadow, and were collected by sweeping the marsh vegetation.</p><p>Distribution in Canada and Alaska.</p><p>BC, AB, MB, ON, QC, NB, (Bright 1991).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/08B2ED995FF14C92459CA737A9830BB8	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Webster, Reginald P.;Sweeney, Jon D.;DeMerchant, Ian	Webster, Reginald P., Sweeney, Jon D., DeMerchant, Ian (2012): New Coleoptera records from New Brunswick, Canada: Trogossitidae, Cleridae, and Melyridae, with an addition to the fauna of Nova Scotia. ZooKeys 179: 141-156, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.179.2585, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.179.2585
