Khaoula Mahmoudi, Mario E Toledo, Fatiha Bendali-Saoudi, Ilaria Negri
{"title":"Water阿尔及利亚东北部的甲虫:全国新记录和区系更新(鞘翅目,水生蝗科,绵蝇科,水蝇总科,绵蝇科)。","authors":"Khaoula Mahmoudi, Mario E Toledo, Fatiha Bendali-Saoudi, Ilaria Negri","doi":"10.3897/zookeys.1248.153053","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>Water beetles collected from Lake Tonga (North-East of Algeria), one of the best preserved and biodiverse coastal habitats in North Africa, have been studied and identifications of species reassessed, since most previous determinations published in Mahmoudi et al. (2023) were found to be incorrect. In this paper a revised species list is provided, with a small batch of previously unidentified material collected from a second biotope, Garaat Djamel, located 60 km west of Lake Tonga. A total of 42 species were identified, belonging to the families Gyrinidae, Haliplidae, Noteridae, Hygrobiidae, Dytiscidae, Dryopidae, Helophoridae, Hydrochidae, Hydrophilidae, and Hydraenidae, hosting approximately 13% of the Algerian aquatic beetle fauna, with the vast majority of this diversity concentrated in Lake Tonga, underscoring its status as a key hotspot of aquatic beetle biodiversity in the region. Five of the identified species are new records for Algeria: Helophoruscf.paraminutus Angus, 1986, <i>Amphiopssenegalensis</i> (Laporte, 1840), <i>Enochrusnatalensis</i> (Gemminger & Harold, 1868), <i>Crephelochares ?livornicus</i> (Kuwert, 1890) and <i>Ochthebiusfallaciosus</i> Ganglbauer, 1901. <i>Hydrochusgrandicollis</i> Kiesenwetter, 1870, and <i>Coelostomahispanicum</i> (Küster, 1848), recently recorded from Algeria, but omitted from major catalogues, are here confirmed for the country. Furthermore, the discovery of a male of the poorly known <i>Haliplusruficeps</i> Chevrolat, 1806 represents the first documented record of this species in more than a century. Photographs of the habitus and male genitalia of <i>H.ruficeps</i> and of the newly recorded species are provided. At present, Algeria supports 301 species of aquatic Coleoptera across 84 genera and 17 families. A comprehensive and updated checklist is also given, with a discussion on several doubtful or unconfirmed records.</p>","PeriodicalId":24051,"journal":{"name":"ZooKeys","volume":"1248 ","pages":"225-243"},"PeriodicalIF":1.3000,"publicationDate":"2025-08-07","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12355190/pdf/","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Water beetles of northeastern Algeria: new records for the country and faunistic updates (Coleoptera, aquatic Adephaga, Dryopidae, Hydrophiloidea, Hydraenidae).\",\"authors\":\"Khaoula Mahmoudi, Mario E Toledo, Fatiha Bendali-Saoudi, Ilaria Negri\",\"doi\":\"10.3897/zookeys.1248.153053\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><p>Water beetles collected from Lake Tonga (North-East of Algeria), one of the best preserved and biodiverse coastal habitats in North Africa, have been studied and identifications of species reassessed, since most previous determinations published in Mahmoudi et al. (2023) were found to be incorrect. In this paper a revised species list is provided, with a small batch of previously unidentified material collected from a second biotope, Garaat Djamel, located 60 km west of Lake Tonga. A total of 42 species were identified, belonging to the families Gyrinidae, Haliplidae, Noteridae, Hygrobiidae, Dytiscidae, Dryopidae, Helophoridae, Hydrochidae, Hydrophilidae, and Hydraenidae, hosting approximately 13% of the Algerian aquatic beetle fauna, with the vast majority of this diversity concentrated in Lake Tonga, underscoring its status as a key hotspot of aquatic beetle biodiversity in the region. Five of the identified species are new records for Algeria: Helophoruscf.paraminutus Angus, 1986, <i>Amphiopssenegalensis</i> (Laporte, 1840), <i>Enochrusnatalensis</i> (Gemminger & Harold, 1868), <i>Crephelochares ?livornicus</i> (Kuwert, 1890) and <i>Ochthebiusfallaciosus</i> Ganglbauer, 1901. <i>Hydrochusgrandicollis</i> Kiesenwetter, 1870, and <i>Coelostomahispanicum</i> (Küster, 1848), recently recorded from Algeria, but omitted from major catalogues, are here confirmed for the country. Furthermore, the discovery of a male of the poorly known <i>Haliplusruficeps</i> Chevrolat, 1806 represents the first documented record of this species in more than a century. Photographs of the habitus and male genitalia of <i>H.ruficeps</i> and of the newly recorded species are provided. At present, Algeria supports 301 species of aquatic Coleoptera across 84 genera and 17 families. 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Water beetles of northeastern Algeria: new records for the country and faunistic updates (Coleoptera, aquatic Adephaga, Dryopidae, Hydrophiloidea, Hydraenidae).
Water beetles collected from Lake Tonga (North-East of Algeria), one of the best preserved and biodiverse coastal habitats in North Africa, have been studied and identifications of species reassessed, since most previous determinations published in Mahmoudi et al. (2023) were found to be incorrect. In this paper a revised species list is provided, with a small batch of previously unidentified material collected from a second biotope, Garaat Djamel, located 60 km west of Lake Tonga. A total of 42 species were identified, belonging to the families Gyrinidae, Haliplidae, Noteridae, Hygrobiidae, Dytiscidae, Dryopidae, Helophoridae, Hydrochidae, Hydrophilidae, and Hydraenidae, hosting approximately 13% of the Algerian aquatic beetle fauna, with the vast majority of this diversity concentrated in Lake Tonga, underscoring its status as a key hotspot of aquatic beetle biodiversity in the region. Five of the identified species are new records for Algeria: Helophoruscf.paraminutus Angus, 1986, Amphiopssenegalensis (Laporte, 1840), Enochrusnatalensis (Gemminger & Harold, 1868), Crephelochares ?livornicus (Kuwert, 1890) and Ochthebiusfallaciosus Ganglbauer, 1901. Hydrochusgrandicollis Kiesenwetter, 1870, and Coelostomahispanicum (Küster, 1848), recently recorded from Algeria, but omitted from major catalogues, are here confirmed for the country. Furthermore, the discovery of a male of the poorly known Haliplusruficeps Chevrolat, 1806 represents the first documented record of this species in more than a century. Photographs of the habitus and male genitalia of H.ruficeps and of the newly recorded species are provided. At present, Algeria supports 301 species of aquatic Coleoptera across 84 genera and 17 families. A comprehensive and updated checklist is also given, with a discussion on several doubtful or unconfirmed records.
期刊介绍:
ZooKeys is a peer-reviewed, open-access, online and print, rapidly produced journal launched to support free exchange of ideas and information in systematic zoology, phylogeny and biogeography.
All papers can be freely copied, downloaded, printed and distributed at no charge. Authors and readers are thus encouraged to post the pdf files of published papers on homepages or elsewhere to expedite distribution. There is no charge for color.