Conservation Status
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Locally rare.
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- University of Alberta Museums
Cyclicity
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Adults fly from June to July.
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Distribution
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Alberta, east to Wisconsin, Ontario, Quebec and Newfoundland. In Alberta, this species has been recorded in the Edmonton area.
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General Description
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Adult bodies are medium brown and the vertex of the head with only posterior warts. Legs have well-developed black spines and brown spurs. Spur formula is 2, 4, 4. In males, the clasper is complex. The basal body is lump-like with a ventral conical process. The dorsal lobe is thumb-like and the distal article is curved, club-like and located between the dorsal and ventral lobes of the clasper body (Wiggins, 1998).
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Habitat
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Sphagnum bogs and some surface pools?
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Life Cycle
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B. complicatus studied in Newfoundland was univoltine. The larvae overwinters as 5th instars (Wiggins, 1996).
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Trophic Strategy
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Larvae feed on filamentous algae, vascular plant fragments and animal material (Wiggins, 1996).
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Beothukus complicatus
(
néerlandais ; flamand
)
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- Wikipedia-auteurs en -editors