Skip to main content
ZooKeys logoLink to ZooKeys
. 2019 Jan 3;(812):93–131. doi: 10.3897/zookeys.812.30937

The Carabidae (Coleoptera) of Shada Al-A’Ala Nature Reserve, Southwestern Saudi Arabia, with description of a new species of Paussinae

Mahmoud S Abdel-Dayem 1,2,, Ali A Elgharbawy 1,3, Iftekhar Rasool 1, Peter Nagel 4, Hathal M Aldhafer 1
PMCID: PMC6328528  PMID: 30636912

Abstract Abstract

We report the Carabidae collected at the Shada Al-A’Ala Nature Reserve (SANR) in Baha Province in southwestern Saudi Arabia during 2013–2015. In total, 62 carabid species and subspecies representing 39 genera, 17 tribes, and 10 subfamilies were identified, including one new species, Paussusminutulus Nagel & Rasool, sp. n, four new country records, and 24 species that are new provincial records for Baha. The carabid fauna was dominated by the Lebiini with 19 species. A high number of species were rarely collected (34 species) in comparison to the more abundant and common species (9 species). The highest number of species (52 species) was collected during autumn. The carabids of SANR are represented by a large component of Afrotropical faunal elements (28.1%) and smaller numbers of Oriental species (3.5%) and endemic taxa (5.3%). In comparison to Garf Raydah Nature Reserve in Asir Province, also in southwestern Saudi Arabia, SANR had an equal number of carabids sharing 64.5% of the species but with lower number of endemic elements. Our study can serve as a component for implementing a conservation plan for SANR using carabid beetles as sentinel taxa. These research results may support future ecological studies on SNAR carabids.

Keywords: Baha, ground beetles, Shada, endemics, faunistic inventory, new records, new species, nature reserve, Saudi Arabia, zoogeography

Introduction

Over the past three decades, numerous new wildlife protected areas have been established in Saudi Arabia (SA). Not only the number of national parks has increased but also newly established nature reserves, wildlife sanctuaries, and other protected landscapes and biosphere reserves (Abuzinada 2003). It is noted that SA has currently 16 protected areas and 12 national parks (Abuzinada 2003; SWA 2018). For this network of protected areas, biodiversity monitoring is fundamental for effective management. The invertebrate fauna of these protected areas has attracted relatively little attention as compared to those of vertebrates (Abuzinada et al. 2005), although international conventions signed by SA as a member of the Convention on Biological Diversity since 2001 (CBD 2011). Recent insect biodiversity survey and monitoring research projects in several protected areas in SA have been conducted by King Saud University Museum of Arthropods, Riyadh; resulting in several faunistic and ecological works being published (Aldhafer et al. 2012, 2016; Sharaf et al. 2013; Abdel-Dayem et al. 2016, 2017, 2018; El-Hawagry et al. 2016, 2017, 2018). One of these recent projects was focused on the insect biodiversity of Shada Al-A’Ala Nature Reserve (SANR) in Baha Province in southwestern SA. The location and elevation range (470–2,222 m) of the SANR provides relative high rainfall, diverse microclimates, and a distinct biodiversity (SWA 2018). The SANR is undoubtedly one of the most interesting protected areas in SA because of the existence of unique treasure trove of biological diversity. About 22% (495 plant species) of the total SA flora has been reported from the Shada Mountains including 19 endemic plant species and 43% endangered species (Thomas et al. 2017). The SANR harbours important faunas, including griffon vultures and other endemic birds of the southwestern mountains and carnivores (e.g. the rock fox, caracal, striped hyena, wolf, genet, and the Arabian leopard) (SWA 2018). Regarding insects, 119 species of flies (Diptera) have been reported from the SANR (El-Hawagry et al. 2016).

The Carabidae have a cosmopolitan distribution and form one of the most diverse and abundant families of insects constituting a considerable component of the soil fauna (Duchesne et al. 1999). These beetles play an important role in ecosystems as polyphagous predators, whereas others are phytophagous (Thiele 1977). Additionally, carabid beetles play significant role as bioindicators in habitat management, landscape ecology, conservation, pollution, climatic changes and soil characteristics (Rainio and Niemelä 2003; Avgın and Luff 2010; Koivula 2011; Kotze et al. 2011). There are currently 33,920 valid species (Lorenz 2005), 183 of which have been reported from SA (Abdel-Dayem et al. 2018). Unexpectedly, the number of previously published carabid species records from Baha Province are low (30 species) (Mateu 1986; Balkenohl 1994; El-Hawagry et al. 2013; Moore and Robertson 2014; Häckel and Azadbakhsh 2016; Rasool et al. 2017, 2018a, b). In the most recent study of the Baha insect fauna (El-Hawagry et al. 2013), 17 carabid species were reported, with only ant nest beetle, Paussuscephalotes Raffray, 1886 known from SNAR. Rasool et al. (2017, 2018a, b) have reviewed the subtribes Cymindidina, Dromiusina and Lebiina of tribe Lebiini from southwestern SA and described Lebiaraeesae Rasool, Abdel-Dayem & Felix, 2018 and reported Calodromiusmayeti (Bedel, 1907), Dromiusbuettikeri Mateu, 1990, Lebiaauberti Fairmaire, 1892, L.nilotica Chaudoir, 1871, Matabelearabica Mateu, 1986, Mesolestesquadriguttatus Mateu, 1979, Metadromiusarabicus Mateu, 1979, Met.brittoni (Basilewsky, 1948), Microlestesdiscoidalis (Fairmaire, 1892), Mic.infuscatusfragilis Mateu, 1956 and Zolotarevskyellarhytidera (Chaudoir, 1876) from SANR.

However, despite the urgent conservation concerns associated with the SANR reserve, there have been no studies focused on beetles including the Carabidae. Thus, the objectives of this study are to provide a thorough baseline inventory of the carabid fauna of the SANR and to analyze its zoogeographical affinities. This information will assist in providing an essential cognitive basis for future management of this reserve. Additionally, our results will allow for future ecological studies of carabids of SNAR and will contribute to the overall knowledge of Carabidae of SA, the largest country of the Arabian Peninsula.

Methods

Study area

In Shada Al-A’Ala (Upper Shada) Mountain, an outlier of the Sarawat Mountains to the west, the SANR was established in 2002. The reserve is located (latitudes 19°48.894'–19°52.578'N and longitudes 41°17.130'–41°21.000'E) in Al-Mekhwa District (Baha Province); about 20 km southwest of Al-Mekhwa City, the capital of the district (Fig. 1). The SANR occupies an area of 67 km2 and rises about 2,222 m. There is a perennial small freshwater stream in Wadi Neera at the west and southwest part of the reserve. Geologically the area belongs to the greater Afro-Arabian shield, which is a part of the Precambrian crust plate and is generally exposed and locally covered by tertiary volcanic rocks (Schmidt et al. 1972). There are terraced fields used by small local communities; these fields are very small scale and are used to grow distinctive varieties of coffee, banana, lemon, and natural figs (SWA 2018). The climate is similar to the uplands of southwestern SA. It is highly variable and characterized by cool winters, warmer partly cloudy summer, and high rainfall. The average annual temperature of 26.2 °C, and average annual rainfall of about 200 mm, and with wettest period concentrated between March and May (43% annual precipitation) (El-Hawagry et al. 2016).

Figure 1.

Figure 1.

A Map of Saudi Arabia showing location of Baha Province B Location of Shada Al-A’Ala Nature Reserve within Baha Province.

The vegetation is rich, with the Leguminosae (Fabaceae) and composites (Asteraceae) having the highest contribution, followed by graminoides (Poaceae) (Al Zubaide et al. 2017, Thomas et al. 2017). The vegetation comprises 72.4% perennials and 27.6% annuals; represented by 17.2% trees, 51.8% shrubs, and 31.1% weeds (Al Zubaide et al. 2017). The vegetation at the foothills of Shada Al-A’Ala Mountain consists predominantly of subtropical Acacia thorn woodlands extending from the base up to 1500 m a.s.l. The vegetation above 1000 m elevation is dominated by Acaciaasak (Thomas et al. 2017). Higher up, above the Acacia zone, there are shrubs of Barbary fig or cactus pear, Opuntiaficus-indica (L.) Mill. (Cactaceae). For more details on the vegetation in SANR (see El-Hawagry et al. 2016).

Beetle collection

As part of a research project for studying the insect biodiversity in the SANR the adult ground beetles were sampled from 2013–2015. The sampling was conducted at various sites in varied habitats at 13 different elevation levels (Table 1) within the SANR. The geographical coordinate data of each collecting location were recorded using GPS Garmin, Montana 650 unit (Garmin Instruments Inc., Olathe, Kansas, USA).

Table 1.

List of collecting elevation levels and geographical coordinates, in Shada Al-A’Ala Nature Reserve, southwestern SA.

No. Elevation (m) Latitude (N) Longitude (E)
1 471 19°44.870', 41°20.008'
2 825 19°52.717', 41°18.712'
3 851 19°52.685', 41°18.663'
4 892 19°52.598', 41°18.672'
5 1.008 19°52.023', 41°18.157'
6 1.225 19°51.762', 41°18.089'
7 1.325 19°51.066', 42°18.037'
8 1.388 19°51.387', 41°18.187'
9 1.448 19°47.511', 41°18.258'
10 1.474 19°50.710', 41°18.267'
11 1.563 19°50.329', 41°18.604'
12 1.611 19°50.411', 41°18.686'
13 1.666 19°50.575', 41°18.691'

Collected beetles were initially sorted to morphospecies level, mounted and then identified to species levels. Some species were sent to experts for identification or confirmation, as indicated in the remarks. The specimens are deposited in the collection of King Saud University Museum of Arthropods (KSMA), King Saud University, Riyadh, SA.

The description of the new species of Paussus was assisted using a Leica M205C dissecting microscope with 10× eyepieces and Planapo 1.0× and 1.6× front lenses, allowing magnification up to 240×. An eyepiece micrometer was used for measurements.

Classification and nomenclature

The subfamily and tribal classification of the family and nomenclature of the species in this study follows the Catalogue of Palaearctic Coleoptera (Löbl and Löbl 2017). However, the taxonomic order of species in the genus Sphaerotachys J. Miller, 1926 (Trechinae, Bembidiini) follows Sciaky and Vigna Taglianti (2003). The subfamilies, tribes, genera and species are listed alphabetically.

Faunal list

For each species, the following information is provided: current nomenclatural combinations, material examined, zoogeography, distribution, published records in SA, and remarks. The label data for examined specimens are listed as follows: elevation level within the SANR, followed by the date of collection (months as Roman numerals), the collecting method (handpicking (HP), light traps (LT), malaise traps (MT), pitfall traps (PT), sweeping net (SW) and vacuuming (VC)) and the number of examined specimens followed by sex (♂ for male, ♀ for female, ex(s) for example with unidentified sex). The material examined is arranged in ascending order with respect to the elevation, then chronologically with respect to the month of collection. A semicolon separates different records; if these are from the same elevation, the elevation is listed only at the beginning with the older record.

General distribution and zoogeography

The zoogeography, which were used in the analysis of carabid faunal affinity, were assigned for each species using the zoogeographic realms of the world suggested by Holt et al. (2013). The zoogeography is based on their modern general geographical distributions (each country is represented by two capital letters according to ISO 3166 “ISO Alpha VC–2 Country code”: The Nations Online Project: https://www.nationsonline.org/oneworld/country_code_list.htm :) provided by Löbl and Löbl (2017) and Lorenz (2017) unless otherwise stated.

Results

During this study, 3,287 adult carabid beetles were collected from SANR, comprising 62 species from 39 genera within 17 tribes and 10 subfamilies. These species include the description of a new species (Paussusminutulus sp. n.), three SA endemic species and six confined to Arabian Peninsula. Four species have not been previously recorded from SA, and 24 species recorded for the first time from Baha Province. The details of these species are provided in the faunal list below.

Of the carabids collected from SNAR, the most diverse tribe was the Lebiini, represented by 19 species (30.6% of the total species) in 13 genera (33.3% of the total genera) (Fig. 2). About 50% of the tribes are represented by one or two species. Nine species (14.5%) are classified as abundant and common species; Lebianilotica, Metadromiusarabicus, Sphaerotachysconspicuus (Schaum, 1863) were the most abundant species, comprising 50.4% of the total catch. Twenty species (32.3%) are considered rare, represented by four or fewer individuals collected over the two years. The maximum number of species were collected during autumn (52 species). The genus Anthracus Motschulsky, 1850 was recorded for the first time for SA. Three species have been identified to the genus level, belonging to Amblystomus, Metadromius and Singilis.

Figure 2.

Figure 2.

The number of genera and species for each tribe of ground beetles recorded between 2013–2015, from Shada Al-A’Ala Nature Reserve, southwestern Saudi Arabia.

Faunal List

Brachininae

Brachinini
Brachinus crepitans

(Linnaeus, 1758)

Material examined.

471 m: 10.XII.2014, LT, 1♂, 1♀.

General distribution and zoogeography.

AL, DZ, AM, AT, AZ, BY, BE, BA, BG, HR, CY, CZ, DK, EE, FI, FR, GE, DE, GB, GR, HU, IR, IQ, IE, IT, JO (Nasir and Katbeh-Bader 2017), KZ, KG, LV, LB, LT, LU, MK, MD, ME, NL, NO, PL, PT, RO, RU, SA, SK, SI, ES, SE, CH, SY, TJ, TN, TR, TM, UA, UZ. This range exemplifies PAL_SAR.

Published records.

Asir (Abdel-Dayem et al., 2018), Riyadh (Abdel-Dayem et al. 2017). New provincial records for Baha.

Remarks.

A rare species. The adult beetles were collected during autumn by hand picking under stones along the edge of a freshwater stream flowing through Acacia thorn woodlands. Mahmoud Abdel-Dayem identified this species.

Brachinus dorsalis

Dejean, 1831

Material examined.

892 m: 14.II.2014, LT, 1♂; 02. III.2014, LT, 1♂; 18.X.2014, LT, 1♀; 14.XI.2015, LT, 1♂; 08.XII.2014, LT. 1♂; 09.XII.2014, LT, 1♂.

General distribution and zoogeography.

SA, YE. END_AR species.

Published records.

Asir (Abdel-Dayem et al. 2018), Jizan (Mateu 1990). New provincial records for Baha.

Remarks.

A rare species that was collected during autumn and winter by light trapping close to a freshwater stream flowing through Acacia thorn woodlands. Mahmoud Abdel-Dayem identified this species.

Pheropsophus africanus

(Dejean, 1825)

Material examined.

471 m: 03.III.2015, LT, 1♂; 15.XI.2015, LT, 1♂, 3♀; 10.XII.2014, HP, 9♂, 2♀.

General distribution and zoogeography.

AE, DZ, EG (including Sinai), ER, ET, IL, IQ, IR, JO (Nasir and Katbeh-Bader 2017), LY, MA, NE, SA, SD, TD, TN, YE. AFR_SAR species.

Published records.

Asir (Basilewsky 1979), Baha (El-Hawagry et al. 2013), Makkah (Britton 1948; Basilewsky 1979).

Remarks.

A frequent species, which was found only at low elevation (471 m) under stones and debris along the side of freshwater stream flowing through Acacia thorn woodlands. These adults were collected during autumn and winter by hand picking and by using a light trap. Mahmoud Abdel-Dayem identified this species.

Carabinae

Carabini
Calosoma imbricatum

Klug, 1832

Material examined.

892 m: 26.I.2015, LT, 1♀; 14.II.2014, LT, 2♂, 1♀; 15.II.2014, LT, 1♀; 12.XI.2015, LT, 1♂; 14.XI.2015, LT, 1♂. 1,225 m: 12.XI.2015, LT, 1♀. 1,325 m: 15.XI.2015, 1♀. 1,448 m: 03.XI.2013, LT, 1♀; 03.XI.2013, HP, 1♂. 1,474 m: 02.III.2015, LT, 1♀. 1,611 m: 15.II.2014, LT, 1♀; 21.IV.2014, LT, 1♀.

General distribution and zoogeography.

AE, BF, CV, DJ, DZ, EG, ER, ET, IQ, IR, KE, KW, LB, LY, ML, NE, OM, PK, QA, SA, SD, SN, SO, TD, YE. AFR_SAR species.

Published records.

Asir (Abdel-Dayem et al. 2018), Baha (El-Hawagry et al. 2013), Eastern Province (Heinertz 1979), Jizan and Makkah (Britton 1948), Riyadh (Heinertz 1979; Abdel-Dayem et al. 2017).

Remarks.

A rare species, which was collected during autumn, winter, and spring. The adults were collected by light trapping and hand picking in Acacia thorn woodlands and Barbary fig shrub community. Ali Elgharbawy identified this species.

Calosoma olivieri

Dejean, 1831

Material examined.

892 m: 15.II.2014, LT, ♀; 23.IV.2014, LT, 1♂; 13.XI.2015, LT, 1♂; 14.XI.2015, LT, 1♂, 1♀. 1,225 m: 15.II.2014, PT, 1♀. 1,325 m: 15.II.2014, LT, 1♂, 3♀; 15.II.2014, PT, 1♀; 15.XI.2015, LT, 2♀. 1,474 m: 15.II.2014, LT, 1♂. 1,611 m: 15.II.2014, LT, 3♂, 6♀.

General distribution and zoogeography.

AF, DZ, EG, IQ, IR, IT, JO, LY, MA, PK, SA, SY, TD, TM, TN, UZ, YE. PAL_SAR species.

Published records.

Makkah (Britton 1948, Mateu 1990); Riyadh (Heinertz 1979; Abdel–Dayem et al. 2017). New provincial records for Baha.

Remarks.

A frequent species that was collected during autumn, winter, and spring. The species was collected by light trapping and hand picking in Acacia thorn woodlands and Barbary fig shrub community. Ali Elgharbawy identified this species.

Calosoma senegalense

Dejean, 1831

Material examined

. 892 m: 15.XI.2015, LT, 1♀. 1,225 m: 14.XI.2015, LT, 1♂.

General distribution and zoogeography.

AO, BF, BI, BJ, BW, CD, CF, CG, CI, CM, CV, ER, ET, GA, GH, GM, GN, GQ, GW, KE, LR, LS, MG, ML, MR, MW, MZ, NA, NE, NG, RE, RW, SL, SN, SO, SZ, TD, TG, TZ, UG, ZA, ZM, ZW. New to Arabian Peninsula. This range exemplifies the AFR realm.

Remarks.

A rare species. The adults were collected only during autumn (November) by light trapping in an area dominated by Acacia trees. Mahmoud Abdel-Dayem identified this species.

Cicindelinae

Cicindelini
Calomera alboguttata

(Klug, 1832)

Material examined.

471 m: 03.III.2015, LT, 24 exs; 15.XI.2015, LT, 2 exs; 10.XII.2014, LT, 7 exs. 1,611 m: 02.III.2015, LT, 1 ex.

General distribution and zoogeography.

EG, ER, ET, KE, SA, SD, SO, YE. This range exemplifies the AFR realm.

Published records.

Makkah (Britton 1948). New record for Baha Province.

Remarks.

A frequent species collected during autumn and winter, with more individuals during late winter. These adult beetles were collected by light trapping in Acacia thorn woodlands and Barbary fig shrub community. Mahmoud Abdel-Dayem identified this species.

Cylindera rectangularis

(Klug, 1832)

Material examined.

1,474 m: 14.XI.2015, LT, 1 ex. 1,611 m: 23.VIII.2014, LT, 2 exs.

General distribution and zoogeography.

CD, ER, ET, KE, MW, MZ, SA, SD, SO, TZ, UG, YE. This range exemplifies the AFR realm.

Published records.

Asir (Abdel-Dayem et al. 2018), Makkah (Abdel-Dayem and Kippenhan 2013). New record for Baha Province.

Remarks.

A rare species. The adults were collected by light trapping during summer and autumn in Acacia thorn woodland community. Jürgen Wiesner identified this species.

Myriochila melancholica

(Fabricius 1798)

Material examined.

1,325 m: 21.IV.2014, LT, 1♂. 1,474 m: 23.VIII.2014, LT, 1♀.

General distribution and zoogeography.

AE, AF, AL, AM, AO, AZ, BF, BH, BJ, BW, CD, CF, CG, CI, CM, CN, CV, CY, CZ, DZ, EG, ER, ES, ET, FR, GA, GE, GH, GM, GN, GQ, GR, GW, IL, IN, IQ, IR, IT, JO, KE, KG, KZ, LB, LY, MA, MG, MW, MZ, NA, NG, NP, OM, PK, PT, QA, SA, SC, SD, SL, SN, SO, ST, SY, TD, TG, TJ, TM, TN, TR, TZ, UZ, YE, ZA, ZM, ZW. This range exemplifies AFR_MAD_ORR_PAL_SAR.

Published records.

Asir (Abdel-Dayem et al. 2018), Jizan and Najran (Britton 1948), Riyadh (Abdel-Dayem et al. 2017). New record for Baha Province.

Remarks.

A rare species. The two specimens were collected during summer and spring by light trapping in Acacia thorn woodlands. Mahmoud Abdel-Dayem identified this species.

Myriochila nudopectoralis

(W. Horn, 1903)

Material examined.

1,325 m: 02.IX.2015, LT, 1♂, 1♀.

General distribution and zoogeography.

ET, OM, YE. New country record. This range exemplifies the AFR realm.

Remarks.

A rare species that was collected during summer by light trapping from Acacia thorn woodlands. Jürgen Wiesner identified this species.

Harpalinae

Chlaeniini
Chlaenius canariensis seminitidus

Chaudoir, 1856

Material examined.

892 m: 15.II.2014, LT, 2♂; 21.IV.2014, LT, 1♂, 1♀; 14.XI.2015, LT, 1♂. 1,225 m: 15.II.2014, LT, 1♀; 14.XI.2015, LT, 1♂. 1,325 m: 15.II.2015, LT, 2♂; 3.VI.2014, LT, 1♂. 1,611 m: 15.II.2014, LT, 2♀; 21.IV.2014, LT, 3♂, 1♀. 1,666 m: 27.I.2014, LT, 1♂.

General distribution and zoogeography.

AE, DZ, EG, IL, IQ, IR, JO, LB, LY, MA, SA, SY, TN, TR. This range exemplifies the SAR realm.

Published records.

Asir (Abdel-Dayem et al. 2018). New record for Baha Province.

Remarks.

A frequent species that was found at all elevation levels in the SANR in Acacia thorn woodlands and Barbary fig communities. The adults were collected by light trapping during autumn, winter, and spring. Erich Kirschenhofer identified this subspecies.

Chlaenius flavipes

Ménétriés, 1832

Material examined.

1,008 m: 08.XII.2014, HP, 1♂.

General distribution and zoogeography.

AF, AL, AM, AZ, BA, BG, GE, GR, HR, HU, IN, IQ, IR, KG, KZ, MD, MK, NP, PK, RO, RU, SA (Abdel-Dayem et al. 2017), TJ, TM, TR, UA, UZ. ORR_PAL_SAR species.

Published records.

Asir and Riyadh (Abdel-Dayem et al. 2017, 2018). New record for Baha Province.

Remarks.

A rare species that was collected during autumn. The only adult specimen was collected by hand under a stone at the edges of freshwater pools in Acacia thorn woodlands. Erich Kirschenhofer identified this species.

Chlaenius laeviplaga saudiarabica

Mandl, 1980

Material examined.

471 m: 10.XII.2014, HP, 9♂, 5♀. 892 m: 10.XII.2014, LT, 1♂, 1♀.

General distribution and zoogeography.

AE, SA. END_AR species.

Published records.

Asir (Mandl 1980; Abdel-Dayem et al. 2018). New record for Baha Province.

Remarks.

A frequent species that was collected during autumn. The adults were found under stones along the margins of a freshwater stream and collected by hand. Additional adults collected at night by using lights. Erich Kirschenhofer identified this subspecies.

Chlaenius pachys

Chaudoir, 1876

Material examined.

471 m: 10.XII. 2014, HP, 2♀.

General distribution and zoogeography.

ER, ET, JO (Nasir and Katbeh-Bader 2017), SD, SO, SA, YE. AFR species.

Published records.

Jizan and Makkah (Britton 1948). New provincial records for Baha.

Remarks.

A rare species that was collected during late autumn. The two adults were found under stones along the edge of freshwater stream collected by hand picking. Erich Kirschenhofer identified this species.

Cyclosomini
Tetragonoderus arcuatus

Dejean, 1829

Material examined.

1611 m, 21.IV.2014, LT, 1♂; 03.VI.2014, LT, 1♀.

General distribution and zoogeography.

BD, CN, EG, ET, IL (Assmann et al. 2015), IN, IQ, LA, MM, NE, NP, OM, PK, SD, TD, YE. AFR_ORR_SAR species.

Published records.

known only from Baha Province (El-Hawagry et al. 2013).

Remarks.

A rare species that was collected during spring by light trapping in a Barbary fig shrub community. Mahmoud Abdel-Dayem identified this species.

Tetragonoderus quadrum

(Fabricius, 1792)

Material examined.

892 m: 14.II.2014, HP, 1♂; 15.II.2014, LT, 1♀. 1,325 m: 02.III.2015, LT, 1♀; 03.VI.2014, LT, 1♂; 05.VI.2014, PT, 1♀. 1563 m, 17.X.2014, LT,1♀.

General distribution and zoogeography.

ER, ET, GM, MR, SA, SN, SO, TD. AFR species.

Published records.

Jizan (Mateu 1990). New record for Baha Province.

Remarks.

A rare species which was collected during autumn, winter, and spring from Acacia thorn woodlands and Barbary fig shrub communities. Mahmoud Abdel-Dayem identified this species.

Harpalini
Amblystomus orpheus

(LaFerté-Sénectěre, 1853)

Material examined.

825 m: 14.XI.2015, LT, 2 exs; 15.XI.2015, LT, 1 ex. 892 m: 17.X.2014, LT, 1 ex; 14.XI.2015, LT, 1ex; 1,225 m: 2.IX.2015, LT, 2 exs. 1,325 m: 2.IX.2015, LT, 4 exs; 17.X.2014, LT, 1ex; 15.XI.2015, LT, 3 exs. 1,474 m: 14.XI.2015, LT, 1ex. 1,563 m: 20.IV.2014, LT, 2 exs; 14.XI.2015, LT, 4 exs. 1,611 m: 2.IX.2015, LT, 1 ex.

General distribution and zoogeography.

AE, AO, BF, BI, CD, CF, CM, CV, ER, ET, KE, ML, MR, MW, MZ, NA, NE, SA (Abdel-Dayem et al. 2018), SN, SO, TD, TZ, UG, YE, ZA, ZW. AFR species.

Published records.

Asir (Abdel-Dayem et al. 2018). New provincial records for Baha.

Remarks.

A frequent species that was collected during late summer (September) to autumn, and spring. The adult specimens were collected only using light traps in Acacia thorn woodlands and cactus communities. David Wrase identified this species.

Amblystomus

sp.

Material examined.

892 m: 16.X.214, LT, 1♂, 1♀; 15.XI.2015, LT, 1♂, 1♀; 08.XII.2014, LT, 1♀.1,611 m: 21.IX.2015, LT, 1♀.

Remarks.

A rare species that was collected during late summer and autumn. The above specimens were collected by light traps set at lower altitude in Acacia thorn woodlands. David Wrase and Boris Kataev identified this taxon.

Anthracus angusticollis

(Péringuey, 1908)

Material examined.

1,474 m: 17.X.2014, LT, 1♂.

General distribution and zoogeography.

AE, CD, ET, GM, MG, MR, NA, SN, SO, TD, TZ, ZA. New country record. AFR species.

Remarks. A rare species. The single above male was collected during autumn at light in Acacia thorn woodlands. Bernd Jaeger identified this species.

Crasodactylus punctatus

Guerin-Meneville, 1847

Material examined.

851 m: 15.II.2014, LT, 2 exs. 892 m: 26.I.2015, LT, 1 ex; 15.II.2014, LT, 2 exs; 20.IV.2014, LT, 1 ex; 15.X.2014, LT, 4 exs; 17.X.2014, LT, 3 exs; 18.X.2014, LT, 2 exs; 14.XI.2015, LT, 3 exs; 15.XI.2015, LT, 1 ex; 07.XII.2014, LT, 1 ex. 1,225 m: 02.IX.2015, LT, 1 ex; 17.X.2014, LT, 3 exs; 14.XI.2015, LT, 1 ex. 1,325 m: 17.X.2014, LT, 14 exs; 18.X.2014, PT, 1 ex; 15.XI.2015, LT, 9 exs. 1,474 m: 17.X.2014, LT, 1 ex; 18.X.2014, PT, 3 exs. 1,448 m: 03.XI.2013, LT, 31 exs. 1,563 m: 14.XI.2015, LT, 1 ex. 1,611 m: 02.IX.2015, LT, 1 ex. 1,666 m: 17.X.2014, LT, 10 exs.

General distribution and zoogeography.

AF, CD, DJ, ER, ET, KE, IQ, IR, NE, OM, PK, SA (Abdel-Dayem et al. 2018), SO, TD, TN, YE (including Socotra). AFR_SAR species.

Published records.

Asir (Abdel-Dayem et al. 2018). New provincial records for Baha.

Remarks.

A common species that was collected between an altitude of 851–1666 m in Acacia thorn woodlands and a Barbary fig shrub community using both light traps and pitfall traps. The highest number of individuals were collected during autumn. David Wrase identified this species.

Harpalus impressus

Roth, 1851

Material examined.

892 m: 23.IV.2014, LT, 1 ex. 1,474 m: 2.XI.2013, HP, 3 exs.

General distribution and zoogeography.

ER, ET, SD, SA, YE, UG. AFR species.

Published records.

Asir (Basilewsky 1979; Abdel-Dayem et al. 2018).

Remarks.

A rare species that was collected during summer and autumn from Acacia thorn woodlands. David Wrase identified this species.

Harpalus tenebrosus tenebrosus

Dejean, 1829

Material examined.

1,225 m: 02.IX.2015, LT, 1♂, 2♀. 1,666 m: 02.IX.2015, LT, 1♀.

General distribution and zoogeography.

AF, AL, AM, AT, AZ, BA, BE, BG, CH, CY, CZ, DE, DZ, EG, ES, FR, GB, GE, GR, HR, HU, IL, IQ, IR, IT, JO, MA, MD, ME, MK, MR, OM, PK, PL, PT, RO, RS, RU, SA (Abdel-Dayem et al. 2018), SI, SK, SY, TJ, TM, TN, TR, UA, UZ. PAL_SAR subspecies.

Published records.

Asia (Abdel-Dayem et al. 2018). New provincial records for Baha.

Remarks.

A rare species collected during late summer by light trapping in Acacia thorn woodlands and Barbary fig communities. David Wrase identified this species.

Progonochaetus planicollis

(Putzeys, 1880)

Material examined.

471 m: 10.XII. 2014, HP, 1♀. 892 m: 26.I.2015, LT, 1♂, 1♀; 14.II.2014, LT, 3♂, 7♀; 15.II.2014, LT, 4♂, 5♀; 16.II.2014, LT, 1♂; 20.IV.2014, LT, 1♂; 21.IV.2014, LT, 1♀; 23.IV.2014, LT, 1♀; 15.XI.2015, LT, 1♀; 07.XII.2014, LT, 1♀; 08.XII.2014, LT, 1♂, 3♀; 10.XII.2014, LT, 1♂. 1,225 m: 27.I.2015, LT, 1♀. 1,325 m: 15.II.2014, LT, 4♂; 02.III.2015, LT, 1♀. 1,474 m: 15.II.2014, LT, 1♂. 1,448 m: 03.XI.2013, LT, 1♂. 1,563 m: 15.II.2014, LT, 1♀. 1,611 m: 15.II.2014, LT, 1♀; 21.IV.2014, LT, 1ex. 1,666 m: 21.IV.2014, LT, 1ex.

General distribution and zoogeography.

AO, BF, CM, CD, CF, CG, CI, DJ, ER, ET, GA, GH, GN, GQ, GW, KE, ML, MZ, NA, NG, RW, SA, SN, SO, TD, TZ, YE, ZM, ZW. AFR species.

Published records.

Asir (Basilewsky 1979; Abdel-Dayem et al. 2018). New record for Baha Province.

Remarks.

A frequent species that was collected during all seasons with more individuals collected during winter. The adults were collected by light trapping and hand picking in Acacia thorn woodlands and Barbary fig communities. David Wrase identified this species.

Siopelus quadraticollis

(Putzeys in Chaudoir, 1878)

Material examined.

892 m: 26.I.2015, LT, 1ex; 15.II.2014, LT, 1♂, 2♀; 18.X.2014, LT, 1♂, 2♀; 14.XI.2015, LT, 2♂, 5♀; 07.XII.2014, LT, 1♂, 1♀. 1,225 m: 15. II.2014, HP, 1♂; 17.X.2014, LT, 6♂, 4♀; 12.XI.2015, LT, 1♂. 1,325 m: 17.X.2014, LT, 14♀; 18.X.204, PT, 1♀; 15.XI.2015, LT, 2♀; 08.XII.2014, HP, 2♀. 1388 m: 08.XII.2014, HP, 1♀. 1,448 m: 03.XI.2013, HP, 3♀. 1,474 m: 17.X.2014, LT, 1♂; 18.X.2014, PT, 3♀; 02.IX.2015, LT, 2♀. 1,563 m: 02.IX.2015, LT, 3♀; 17.X.2014, LT, 1♂, 2♀. 1,611 m: 02.IX.2015, LT, 1♀.

General distribution and zoogeography.

ET, SA (Abdel-Dayem et al. 2018), TZ. AFR species.

Published records.

Asir (Abdel-Dayem et al. 2018). New record for Baha Province.

Remarks.

A common species that was collected during late summer, autumn, and winter. The adults were collected by light and pitfall trapping in Acacia thorn woodlands and Barbary fig communities. David Wrase identified this species.

Lebiini
Apristus arabicus

Mateu, 1986

Material examined.

1,325 m: 17.X.2014, LT, 1 ex. 1,474 m: 03.XI.2013, HP, 1 ex.

General distribution and zoogeography.

AE, IQ, SA. SAR species.

Published records.

Asir (Abdel-Dayem et al. 2018), Makkah (Mateu 1986). New record for Baha Province.

Remarks.

A rare species collected during autumn from Acacia thorn woodlands by light trapping and hand picking. Ron Felix identified this species.

Calodromius mayeti

(Bedel, 1907)

Material examined.

825 m: 13.XI.2015, LT, 1♂, 1♀; 15.XI.2015, LT, 1♂, 2♀. 851 m: 15.XI.2015, LT, 1♀. 892 m: 26.I.2015, LT, 1♀; 16.II.2014, LT, 2♂; 13.XI.2015, LT, 1♀. 1,225 m: 20.IV.2014, LT, 2♀; 12.XI.2015, LT, 1♂, 1♀. 1,325 m: 02.III.2015, LT, 1♂, 2♀; 14.XI.2015, LT, 1♂; 17.X.2014, LT, 1♀. 1,474 m: 17.X.2014, LT, 1♀.

General distribution and zoogeography.

AE, DZ, IR, JO (Nasir and Katbeh-Bader 2017), LY, MA, SA, TN. SAR species.

Published records.

Asir and Riyadh (Abdel-Dayem et al. 2017, 2018), Baha (Rasool et al. 2018b), Madinah and Makkah (Mateu 1986).

Remarks.

A frequent species that was found in Acacia thorn woodlands during the four seasons of year, but peak populations occurred during autumn. The adults were collected by light trapping and hand picking. Ron Felix identified this species.

Dromius buettikeri

Mateu, 1990

Material examined.

825 m: 13.XI.2015, LT, 1♀; 15.XI.2015, LT, 1♂. 851 m: 15.XI.2015, LT, 1♀. 892 m: 12.XI.2015, LT, 1♂, 1♀. 1,325 m: 27.I.2015, LT, 1♀; 14.XI.2015, LT, 1♂, 2♀; 15.XI.2015, LT, 1♀. 1,474 m: 27.I.2014, LT, 1♀; 15.II.2014, LT, 1♂, 1♀; 14.XI.2015, LT, 1♂; 08.XII.2014, LT, 1♂. 1,563 m: 27.I.2015, LT, 1♂. 1,611 m: 27.I.2015, LT, 1♀. 1,666 m: 27.I.2015, LT, 1♀.

General distribution and zoogeography.

SA. END_SA species.

Published records.

Asir and Baha (Rasool et al. 2018b), Riyadh (Mateu 1990).

Remarks.

A frequent species. The adults were collected during autumn and winter from Acacia thorn woodlands and Barbary fig communities. The specimens were attracted only to light trap. Ron Felix identified this species.

Eremolestes sulcatus

(Chaudoir, 1876)

Material examined.

1,474 m: 23.IV.2014, PT, 1♂. 1562 m: 03.XI.2013, HP, 1♂, 1♀.

General distribution and zoogeography.

DJ, DZ, ER, ET, SA, SD, TD. This range exemplifies AFR realm.

Published records.

Najran and Riyadh (Mateu 1979, 1986). New record for Baha Province.

Remarks.

A rare species that was found during autumn and spring collected by pitfall trapping and hand picking in Acacia thorn woodlands and Barbary fig shrub communities. Ron Felix identified this species.

Lebia auberti

Fairmaire, 1892

Material examined.

1,225 m: 08.XII.20114, LT, 1♀. 1,325 m: 02.IX.2015, LT, 1♂.

General distribution and zoogeography.

DJ, SA (Rasool et al. 2018a). This range exemplifies AFR realm.

Published records.

Asir (Abdel-Dayem et al. 2018, Rasool et al. 2018), Baha (Rasool et al. 2018a), Riyadh (Mateu 1986).

Remarks.

A rare species with each sex represented by a single specimen collected from Acacia thorn woodlands during late summer and early autumn. Alexander Anichtchenko and Ron Felix identified this species.

Lebia nilotica

Chaudoir, 1871

Material examined.

825 m: 14.XI.2015, LT, 7♂, 10♀; 15.XI.2015, LT, 4♂, 7♀. 892 m: 26.I.2015, LT, 2♂, 3♀; 14.II.2014, LT, 2♂, 3♀; 15.II.2014, LT, 2♂, 2♀; 20.IV.2014, LT, 4♂, 3♀; 21.IV.2014, LT, 1♂, 1♀; 16.X.2014, LT, 1♂; 18.X.2014, LT, 2♂, 4♀; 14.XI.2015, HP, 20♂, 26♀; 14.XI.2015, LT, 1♀; 15.XI.2015, LT, 2♂, 4♀; 09.XII.2014, LT, 1♀; 10.XII.2014, LT, 1♀; 11.XII.2014, LT, 1♀. 1,225 m: 27.I.2015, LT, 1♀; 15.II.2014, HP, 3♀; 15.II.2014, LT, 3♀; 21.IV.2014, LT, 3♂, 6♀; 02.IX.2015, LT, 19♂, 31♀; 14.XI.2015, LT, 3♀; 15.XI.2015, LT, 1♀. 1,325 m: 27.I.2015, LT, 1♀; 15.II.2014, LT, 1♂, 5♀; 15.II.2014, MT, 1♀; 21.IV.2014, LT, 4♂, 9♀; 03.VI.2014, LT, 1♂, 1♀; 23.VIII.2014, LT, 2♀; 02.IX.2015, LT, 14♂, 25♀; 15.XI.2015, LT, 4♂, 6♀. 1,474 m: 15.II.2014, LT, 1♂, 3♀; 21.IV.2014, LT, 2♂, 3♀; 05.V.2015, LT, 1♀; 23.VIII.2014, LT, 1♀; 02.IX.2015, LT, 41exs; 14.XI.2015, LT, 1♀. 1,563 m: 05.V.2015, MT, 2exs; 02.IX.2015, LT, 96exs; 17.X.2014, LT, 1♀. 1,611 m: 21.IV.2014, LT, 4♂, 4♀; 03.VI.2014, LT, 1♂; 03.VI.2014, SW, 1♂; 02.IX.2015, LT, 62exs; 17.X.2014, LT, 1♀; 15.XI.2015, LT, 1♀. 1,666 m: 21.IV.2014, LT, 2♂; 03.VI.2014, LT, 1♂, 2♀; 02.IX.2015, LT, 217exs.

General distribution and zoogeography.

EG, IQ, SA. This range exemplifies SAR realm.

Published records.

Asir (Mateu 1979, Abdel-Dayem et al. 2018, Rasool et al. 2018), Baha and Jizan (Rasool et al. 2018a).

Remarks.

An abundant species that was recorded during all seasons of the year from a wide altitudinal range (471–1666 m). Most individuals were collected during late summer (September). Mahmoud Abdel-Dayem and Iftekhar Rasool identified this species.

Lebia raeesae

Rasool, Abdel-Dayem & Felix, 2018

Material examined.

1,611 m: 21.IV.2014, LT, 1♀. 1,666 m: 27.I.2015, LT, 1♀; 02.III.2015, LT, 1♀; 21.IV.2014, LT, 1♀; 23.VIII.2014, LT, 1♂; 02.IX.2015, LT, 3♂, 4♀.

General distribution and zoogeography.

SA, YE (Rasool et al. 2018a). This range exemplifies SAR realm.

Published records.

Asir and Baha (Rasool et al. 2018a).

Remarks.

A rare species that was collected during spring, summer, and winter by light trapping in Barbary fig shrubs communities. Iftekhar Rasool, Mahmoud Abdel-Dayem and Ron Felix identified this species.

Matabele arabica

Mateu, 1986

Material examined.

1,225 m: 14.XI.2015, LT, 1♀. 1,563 m: 23.VII.2015, LT, 1♀.

General distribution and zoogeography.

OM, SA. This range exemplifies SAR realm.

Published records.

Asir (Mateu 1986), Baha (Rasool et al. 2018a).

Remarks.

A rare species that was collected during autumn and summer, represented by a single specimen during each season. Ron Felix identified this species.

Merizomena buettikeri

(Mateu, 1986)

Material examined.

825 m: 13.XI.2015, LT, 2♀; 15.XI.2015, LT, 20 exs. 851 m: 14.XI.2015, LT, 23 exs; 15.XI.2015, LT, 1♂, 2♀. 892 m: 13.XI.2015, LT, 1♀; 15.XI.2015, LT, 24 exs. 1,225 m: 17.X.2015, LT, 1♀; 12.XI.2015, LT, 1♂, 1♀; 14.XI.2015, LT, 1♂, 2♀;. 1611m: 23.VIII.2014, LT, 1♀.

General distribution and zoogeography.

SA. END_SA species.

Published records.

Asir and Riyadh (Abdel-Dayem et al. 2017, 2018), Madinah and Najran (Mateu 1986). New record for Baha Province.

Remarks.

A common species with more individuals collected during autumn from Acacia thorn woodlands and relatively few individuals during late summer from a Barbary fig shrub community. Iftekhar Rasool, Mahmoud Abdel-Dayem and Ron Felix identified this species.

Metadromius arabicus

Mateu, 1979

Material examined.

825 m: 13.XI.2015, LT, 2♂, 4♀; 15.XI.2015, LT, 5♂, 3♀. 851 m: 14.XI.2015, LT, 1♂; 15.XI.2015, LT, 2♂, 2♀. 892 m: 16.X.2015, LT, 1♂; 17.X.2014, LT, 6♀; 15.XI.2015, LT, 1♂, 1♀. 1,225 m: 02.III.2015, LT, 1♂, 1♀; 02.IX.2015, LT, 2♀; 17.X.2014, LT, 1♂, 2♀; 15.XI.2015, LT, 1♀. 1,325 m: 27.I.2015, LT, 1♀; 02.III.2015, LT, 1♂; 02.IX.2015, LT, 2♂, 1♀; 17.X.2014, LT, 1♂, 1♀; 14.XI.2015, LT, 3♂, 5♀. 1,474 m: 15.II.2014, LT, 1♂, 2♀; 02.IX.2015, LT, 38♂, 52♀; 17.X.2014, LT, 3♂, 2♀. 1562 m: 03.XI.2013, HP, 1♀. 1,563 m: 21.IV.2014, LT, 2♂, 4♀; 02.IX.2015, LT., 51♂, 71♀; 17.X.2014, LT, 3♂, 6♀; 14.XI.2015, LT, 2♂; 18.XI.2015, LT, 2♀. 1,611 m: 27.I.2015, LT, 1♂; 02.IX.2015, LT, 122♂, 146♀; 17.X.2014, LT, 4♂, 2♀. 1,666 m: 02.III.2015, LT, 3♂, 5♀; 05.V.2015, LT, 2♀; 02.IX.2015, LT, 21♂, 29♀.

General distribution and zoogeography.

AE, IR, SA. This range exemplifies SAR realm.

Published records.

Asir and Baha (Abdel-Dayem et al. 2018; Rasool et al. 2018b), Riyadh (Mateu 1979).

Remarks.

An abundant species that was collected during all four seasons with most specimens caught during late summer (September). The adults of this species were only collected using light traps. Iftekhar Rasool, Mahmoud Abdel-Dayem and Ron Felix identified this species.

Metadromius brittoni

(Basilewsky, 1948)

Material examined.

471 m: 3.III.2015, LT, 1♀; 10.XII.2014, LT, 1♀. 825 m: 13.XI.2015, LT, 5 exs; 15.XI.2015, LT, 7 exs. 851 m: 13.XI.2015, LT, 1♂; 15.XI.2015, LT, 17 exs. 892 m: 16.II.2014, LT, 1♀; 03.III.2015, LT, 2♀; 23.IV.2014, LT, 12♂, 8♀; 23.VIII.2014, LT, 1♂; 17.X.2014, LT, 24♂, 15♀. 16.X.2014, LT, 2♂, 4♀. 1,225 m: 27.I.2015, LT, 1♂; 02.III.2015, LT, 5♂, 3♀; 21.IV.2014, LT, 17♂, 10♀; 05.V.2015, LT, 9 exs; 03.VI.2014, LT, 21♂, 17♀; 23.VIII.2014, LT, 8♂, 5♀; 24.VIII.2014, LT, 1♂; 02.IX.2015, PT, 1 ex; 17.X.2014, LT, 2♂, 3♀; 18.X.2014, PT, 1♀. 1,325 m: 02.III.2015, LT, 6 exs; 21.IV.2014, LT, 2♂, 3♀; 05.V.2015, LT, 1 ex; 23.VIII.2014, LT, 13♂, 10♀; 02.IX.2015, LT, 3 exs; 17.X.2014, LT, 2♂, 5♀. 1,474 m: 20.IV.2014, LT, 1 ex; 23.VIII.2014, LT, 1♂; 02.IX.2015, LT, 1♂; 17.X.2014, LT, 1♂. 1562 m, 03.XI.2013, HP, 1♂. 1563 m, 21.IV.2014, LT, 1♂, 1♀; 03.VI.2014, LT, 3 exs. 1611 m 23.VIII.2014, VC, 1♂; 17.X.2014, LT, 1♂; 02.IX.2015, LT, 2 exs; 18.X.2014, PT, 1♀.

General distribution and zoogeography.

JO, SA, YE. This range exemplifies SAR realm.

Published records.

Asir, Baha and Jizan (Abdel-Dayem et al. 2018; Rasool et al. 2018b), Riyadh (Mateu 1979).

Remarks.

A common species that was collected during all four seasons from different altitudinal ranges (471–1611 m) of the SANR. Iftekhar Rasool, Mahmoud Abdel-Dayem and Ron Felix identified this species.

Metadromius

sp.

Material examined.

471 m: 03.III.2015, LT, 1♂. 1,325 m: 02.III.2015, LT, 1♀.

Remarks.

A rare species that was collected during late winter. It is similar to M.ephippiatus (Fairmaire, 1884), which is known from North Africa (DZ, MA, TN) (Löbl and Löbl 2017). However, these specimens along with SA specimens identified by Mateu (1986) are rather different from M.ephippiatus. The specimens from SA probably represent a new species. These specimens have been included in a current taxonomic revision of the Middle East Metadromius (R. Felix, personal communication). Ron Felix identified this species.

Microlestes discoidalis

(Fairmaire, 1892)

Material examined.

825 m: 13.XI.2015, LT, 1♂; 15.XI.2015, LT, 1♂. 851 m: 15.XI.2015, LT, 2♂, 1♀; 892 m: 26.I.2015, LT, 2♂, 1♀; 15.II.2014, LT, 3♂, 8♀; 23.IV.2014, LT, 1♂; 1,563 m: 21.IV.2014, LT, 2♂. 1,611 m: 02.IX.2015, LT, 1♂, 2♀.

General distribution and zoogeography.

AE, AF, BD, CD, CV, DJ, ER, ET, IL, IN, IR, JO (Nasir and Katbeh-Bader 2017), KE, MR, NE, OM, SA, SD, SO, TD, TR, TZ, YE. AFR_ORR_SAR species.

Published records.

Asir, Baha, Jizan and Riyadh (Abdel-Dayem et al. 2017; 2018; Rasool et al. 2018b), Makkah (Britton 1948; Mateu 1986).

Remarks.

A frequent species that was collected during all seasons of the year with more individuals during the winter collecting dates. Iftekhar Rasool, Mahmoud Abdel-Dayem and Ron Felix identified this species.

Microlestes infuscatus fragilis

Mateu, 1956

Material examined.

892 m, 23.IV.2014, LT, 7♂, 9♀. 1,325 m: 23.VIII.2014, LT, 1♀. 1,474 m: 02.IX.2015, LT, 1♀. 1,666 m: 02.II.2015, PT, 1♀; 23.VIII.2014, LT, 1♀; 02.IX.2015, LT, 1♂; 15.XI.2015, PT, 1♀.

General distribution and zoogeography.

AF, SA, YE. This range exemplifies SAR realm.

Published records.

Asir, Baha and Jizan (Mateu 1979; Abdel-Dayem et al. 2018; Rasool et al. 2018b).

Remarks.

A frequent species, which recorded during all seasons with highest numbers collected during spring (April). Iftekhar Rasool, Mahmoud Abdel-Dayem and Ron Felix identified this species.

Pseudomesolestes quadriguttatus

Mateu, 1979

Material examined.

851 m: 15.XI.2015, LT, 1♀. 892 m: 26.I.2015, LT, 1♀; 17.X.2014, LT, 1♂; 18.X.2014, LT, 1♂, 2♀; 15.XI.2015, LT, 1♀. 1,325 m: 02.III.2015, LT, 1♂. 1,563 m: 17.X.2014, LT, 1♀.

General distribution and zoogeography.

SA. END_SA species.

Published records.

Asir and Baha (Rasool et al. 2018b), Riyadh (Mateu 1979).

Remarks.

A rare species that was collected by light trapping during late summer (September), autumn, and winter. Iftekhar Rasool, Mahmoud Abdel-Dayem and Ron Felix identified this species.

Singilis discoidalis

(Mateu, 1986)

Material examined.

851 m: 15.XI.2015, LT, 1♂. 1,225 m: 21.IV.2014, LT, 1♂; 03.VI.2014,1♀; 02.III.2015, 1♀. 1,325 m: 03.VI.2014, LT, 1♂, 2♀; 27.VII.2015, LT, 1♀.

General distribution and zoogeography.

EG, IL, SA, YE. This range exemplifies SAR realm.

Published records.

Asir (Abdel-Dayem et al. 2018), Madinah, Makkah and Najran (Mateu 1986). New record for Baha Province.

Remarks.

A rare species that was caught by light trapping during the different seasons from Acacia thorn woodlands. Alexander Anichtchenko identified this species.

Singilis

sp.

Material examined.

851 m: 15.XI.2015, LT, 1♀.

Remarks.

A rare species that was collected by light trapping in Acacia thorn woodlands during autumn. This unidentified species is closely related to S.cordiger (Peringuey, 1896), which is known from NA, ZA and ZW. Unfortunately, only a single female was collected, and males are needed for identification. Alexander Anichtchenko identified this species.

Syntomus submaculatus

(Wollaston, 1861)

Material examined.

892 m: 21.IV.2014, LT, 1♀. 1,225 m: 28.VIII.2014, LT, 1♀; 08.XII.2014, VC, 2♀. 1,325 m: 15.XI.2015, PT, 1♀. 1388 m: 08.XII.2014, HP, 5♂ 6♀. 1,474 m: 08.XII.2014, VC, 1♀. 1562 m: 03.XI.2013, 2♂ 4♀. 1,563 m: 05.VI.2014, PT, 1♀.

General distribution and zoogeography.

CV, MR, SA TD, YE. This range exemplifies SAR realm.

Published records.

Jizan (Mateu 1986). New record for Baha Province.

Remarks.

A frequent species that was collected during spring, summer, and autumn. Iftekhar Rasool, Mahmoud Abdel-Dayem and Ron Felix identified this species.

Zolotarevskyella rhytidera

(Chaudoir, 1876)

Material examined.

1,474 m: 18.X.2014, PT, 1♀. 1562 m: 03.XI.2013, HP, 1♀.

General distribution and zoogeography.

CD, CV, ER, ET, GM, ML, NE, SA, SD, SN, TD, YE. This range exemplifies AFR realm.

Published records.

Asir, Baha and Jizan (Rasool et al. 2018b), Najran (Mateu 1986).

Remarks.

A rare species collected during the autumn from Acacia thorn woodlands and a Barbary fig shrub community. Iftekhar Rasool, Mahmoud Abdel-Dayem and Ron Felix identified this species.

Perigonini
Perigona nigriceps

(Dejean, 1831)

Material examined.

1,225 m: 02.III.2015, LT, 2 exs; 24.VIII.2014, LT, 1 ex; 02.IX.2015, LT, 1 ex; 17.X.2014, LT, 1 ex. 1,325 m: 02.III.2015, LT, 5 exs; 23.VIII.2014, LT, 1 ex; 14.XI.2015, LT, 1 ex; 15.XI.2015, LT, 2 exs. 1,563 m: 05.V.2015, LT, 1 ex. 1,611 m: 02.III.2015, LT, 1 ex; 05.V.2015, LT, 2 exs; 02.IX.2015, LT, 130 exs. 1,666 m: 02.IX.2015, LT, 99 exs; 02.IX.2015, PT, 1 ex.

General distribution and zoogeography.

AE, AO, AT, AU, AZ, BA, BB, BE, BG, BI, CA, CD, CG, CH, CI, CM, CN, CR, CU, CZ, DE, DK, ES, ET, FI, FR, GB, GH, GN, GP, GR, HR, HU, ID, IN, IQ, IR, IT, JP, KE, KH, KM, KP, KR, LK, LR, LU, LV, MD, MG, MM, MQ, MU, NC, NG, NL, NO, NZ, PG, PH, PL, PR, PT, RE, RU, RW, SA (Abdel-Dayem et al. 2018), SB, SC, SE, SI, SK, SL, SN, ST, TH, TW, TZ, UG, US, VN, YE, ZA, ZM, ZW. COS species.

Published records.

Only reported from Asir (Abdel-Dayem et al. 2018). New record for Baha Province.

Remarks.

A common species that was collected during all seasons with the highest number of individuals caught during late summer (September). The adults were collected mainly by light trapping in Acacia thorn woodlands and Barbary fig shrub communities. Mahmoud Abdel-Dayem identified this species.

Melaeninae

Cymbionotini
Cymbionotum microphthalmum

Chaudoir, 1876

Material examined.

892 m: 23.IV.2014, LT, 1 ex.

General distribution and zoogeography.

ET, NE, SA, SN, TR, YE. AFR_SAR species.

Published records.

Known only from Eastern Province (Basilewsky 1979). New provincial records for Baha.

Remarks.

A rare species that was collected during spring from Acacia thorn woodlands community. Mahmoud Abdel-Dayem identified this species.

Panagaeinae

Panagaeini
Microcosmodes arabicus

Häckel & Azadbakhsh, 2016

Material examined.

825 m: 13.XI.2015, LT, 4♂, 8♀. 851 m: 14.XI.2015, LT, 2♂, 5♀. 892 m: 16.X.2014, LT, 1♂, 1♀; 17.X.2014, LT, 1♀; 14.XI.2015, LT, 6♂, 13♀; 15.XI.2015, LT, 1♂, 3♀; 10.XII.2014, LT, 1♀. 1,325 m: 15.XI.2015, PT, 1♂.

General distribution and zoogeography.

OM, SA, YE. END_AR species.

Published records.

Paratypes known from the SANR, Baha (Häckel and Azadbakhsh 2016).

Remarks.

A frequent species that was collected during autumn from Acacia thorn woodlands with highest number of individuals collected by light traps at lower altitudes. Martin Häckel identified this species.

Paussinae

Paussini
Paussus cephalotes

Raffray, 1886

Material examined.

1562 m, 03.XI.2013, HP, 1♀.

General distribution and zoogeography.

SA, YE. END_AR species.

Published records.

Asir (Abdel-Dayem et al. 2018), Baha (El-Hawagry et al. 2013; Moore and Robertson 2014), Hejaz Mountains (Nagel 1982).

Remarks.

A rare species that was collected during autumn. The female of this species was found under a stone in a Barbary fig shrub community. Iftekhar Rasool identified this species and confirmed by Peter Nagel.

Paussus minutulus

Nagel & Rasool sp. n.

http://zoobank.org/EE392B1D-8B68-4CA1-A49C-61E4529093FD

Figs 4 , 5 , 6

Figure 4.

Figure 4.

Photo of the cactus pear, Opuntiaficus-indica (L.) Mill. (Cactaceae) in the foreground and background, and the shrubs Cappariscartilaginea Decne. (Capparaceae) in the middle ground; the type locality for Paussusminutulus Nagel & Rasool, sp. n. at Shada Al-A’ Ala Nature Reserve, Baha Province, southwestern Saudi Arabia at an elevation of 1611 m.

Figure 5.

Figure 5.

Paussus (Hylotorus) minutulus Nagel & Rasool, sp. n. A Habitus, dorsal view, appendices of right and left side at broadest and narrowest view respectively B Head, lateral view C Types of setae of dorsal pubescence, from left to right: one long, thin, hair-like seta; two shorter, lanceolate bristles, the right one with split apex; four short scaliform setae with multiply split, fringed apex; the setae are shown at enlarged view and at sizes relative to each other, yet without scale. Scale bar: 1 mm. Illustration: Adrian Gertsch. Copyright: Peter Nagel.

Figure 6.

Figure 6.

Paussus (Hylotorus) minutulus Nagel & Rasool, sp. n. A Head, ventral view B Left maxillary palpus, broadest view C Left labial palpus, broadest view. Scale bar: 1 mm. Illustration: Adrian Gertsch. Copyright: Peter Nagel.

Holotype (hereby designated).

Female; dry-mounted, glued on pinned pointed card; head with antennal clubs, left middle tibia with tarsus, left hind leg detached, and glued on to same card.

Original labels.

1. White, rectangular, black printed text and thin frame (verbatim, slash = line break): “KSA. Baha; / Shada Al-A’ Ala Nature Reserve; / 19°50.411'N, 41°18.686'E; / 1611 m; 2.IX.2015; PT.2; / Aldhafer, H., Fadl, H., Abdel-Dayem, M., / Elgharbawy, A., El Torkey, A., Soliman, A.”. 2. White, rectangular, black handwriting: “Paussus sp. 3”.

Added labels.

1. Red, rectangular, printed in black: “HOLOTYPUS/ Paussusminutulus / Nagel & Rasool, 2018”. 2. White label, printed: “♀”.

Holotype repository.

King Saud University Museum of Arthropods (KSMA), Department of Plant Protection, College of Food and Agriculture Sciences, King Saud University, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

Type locality.

Arabian Peninsula, western Saudi Arabia, Baha Province, Upper Shada Mountain, Shada Al-A’ Ala Nature Reserve 19°50.411'N, 41°18.686'E), 1611 m, pitfall trap no. 2, emptied on 2 September 2015 after 48 hours of exposure. The place of exposure of pitfall trap no. 2 is dominated by the cactus pear Opuntiaficus-indica (L.) Mill. (Cactaceae). This “cactus zone” covers the area of the nature reserve above approximately 1500 m. It is an extensively cultivated area, also characterized by small-scale terraced fields (Fig. 4). More details are given in “Study area” above.

Etymology.

The specific epithet is the Latin adjective for very small, because it is the smallest known Arabian Paussus.

Diagnosis.

Paussusminutulus sp.n. is a small Paussus of the P.cucullatus group sensu lato and is most similar to P.abditus Nagel, 2018 (SA) and P.rougemontianus Lorenz, 1998 (Yemen). It is distinguished from both by the tumid antennal club with its posterior basal angle large, thick, and apically truncate. Further specific characters are as follows: antennal club with excavation ending far in front of apex; head with vertex produced, with two distinct pores at the top; collar of anterior pronotum low, with transverse edge rounded and with lateral projections absent; pronotal trichome well developed at both ends of transverse furrow; pygidium with lower (posterior) margin with dense fringe of hair; fore and middle legs robust, not compressed, hind femur dilated and flattened, hind tibiae little wider than thick; small, apically fringed setae present at several body parts, most obvious at antennomere 1 and all legs.

Description of female holotype specimen.

(Fig. 5) Standardized body length from tip of head to tip of elytra 3.4 mm (3.5 mm total body length from tip of head to tip of pygidium), width across mid-elytra 1.5 mm. Body castaneous, appendices little darker, ventral abdomen and anterior part of pronotum little lighter; compacted or reinforced marginal areas of head, antennal clubs and pronotum narrowly blackish. Surface smooth and shining, except forehead matt and antennomere 1 (scape) with dense and coarse, yet shallow punctuation. Pubescence of elytra inconspicuous, restricted mostly to apical and lateral parts (abraded in the middle?), of short and upright as well as recumbent, narrowly lanceolate setae; elytra additionally with very few, long, thin, upright setae on lateral part of disc and as series umbilicata; head, pronotum, pygidium and appendices with scattered, short, mostly appressed setae; these short setae have a multiple split (fringed) apex and are most obvious at antennomeres 1, femora and tibiae, yet absent at elytra; antennal clubs with the normal apical sensory field and with scattered upright or slightly curved medium setae. Head 1.3 times wider than long, frontal margin broadly truncated, slightly biconvex; in dorsal view head in front of eyes little narrowed apically, gena and eye of equal length; temples not projecting; head with vertex produced, with two distinct pores at the top; pores broadly marginate with orifice slightly sunk. Antennomere 1 devoid of distinctly marked longitudinal edges; antennal club excavate on its exterior (posterior) side, 1.5 times longer than wide (basal tooth disregarded), tumid; frontal margin distinctly emarginate near base, with one small and one tiny fenestriform pit; anterior basal angle of club acute, marked; posterior basal projection large, thick, apically truncate; hind (exterior) side of the club with excavation limited by broad dorsal and ventral borders, and ending far before apex; at posterior view dorsal and ventral margins of excavation swollen, undulate with 3 or 4 low tubercles, each with one to three subapical setae; club without distinct trichome near ventral base, just an indistinct assemblage of three slightly thicker setae. Mouthparts as shown in Figure 6, not dissected; ligula at ventral view with longitudinal carinula in the middle of the disc (not shown in Fig. 6); (antepenultimate) maxillary palpomere II at broadest view 1.5 times as long as wide with mesal margin almost straight; (terminal) labial palpomere III long, narrow, five times as long as wide, apically rounded; gula with width/length ratio at narrowest point 0.9 (for measurement see Robertson and Moore (2016). Pronotum approximately as long as wide (1.1 times wider), transversely bipartite, with large trichomes at both ends of furrow; anterior part little wider than head (1.2 times), low, with transverse dorsal edge of collar broadly rounded, slightly indented in the middle, not angulate, lateral angles obscure; posterior part narrowed towards base. Elytral pubescence of two types: a few, very scattered, thin, long, erect setae on lateral parts of the disc (in addition to the similarly looking hairs of the series umbilicornis), plus scattered, recumbent, narrowly lanceolate setae on lateral and apical parts of disc; lateral subapical folds (“flange of Coanda”) normal, without peculiarities. Hind wings present. Pygidium with central disc almost even, with indistinct microsculpture, weakly shining; lower (anatomically posterior) margin explanate; pygidial trichome of dense fringe of long hair set semicircular along lower margin; ventral part of explanate margin set with one row of short, appressed setae. Legs robust, femora and tibiae of fore and middle legs not compressed, hind femur and tibia slightly compressed and dilated, the whole inner side of hind tibia with longitudinal shallow groove; pubescence of femora and tibiae of scattered, small, apically fringed setae; all tibiae without terminal spurs; terminal tarsomere of posterior tarsus as long as three preceding ones together; tarsomeres ventrally with few lateral setae, and glabrous in the middle. Inner side of hind femur subbasally with file of stridulatory organ; the file consists of multiple parallel fine grooves and is located at both the anterior and posterior parts of a longitudinal, short carinula.

Male.

Unknown.

Distribution.

The new species is only known from the holotype female specimen from the type locality at Shada Al-A’ Ala Nature Reserve.

Ecology.

This single specimen of Paussus was found in an area with low impact small-scale agriculture. The vegetation is characterized by dominant cactus pear. The altitude is ca 1610 m, the winters are cool and most of the 200 mm annual rainfall is concentrated between March and May (see details in chapter “Study area” above). The specimen of P.minutulus sp.n. was taken by a pitfall trap which also caught ants of the following taxa: Camponotusaegyptiacus Emery, 1915; Messorebeninus Santschi, 1927; Monomoriumjizane Collingwood & Agosti, 1996; Pheidole Westwood, 1839, sp.; Tetramoriumsimillimum Smith, 1851) and Tetramoriumsericeiventre Emery, 1877. Members of all these genera are known as host of one or more species of Paussini (Geiselhardt et al. 2007). Paussusminutulus sp.n. forms part of the Afrotropical P.cucullatus species group, of which several members are known to be associated with Pheidole sp., including the Arabian P.rougemontianus (see, for example, Luna de Carvalho 1989).

Remarks.

The new species is assigned to PaussussubgenusHylotorus Dalman, 1823, according to the phylogenetically based classification of Robertson and Moore (2016) (see Nagel et al. 2017a). The description of P.minutulus sp.n. given above agrees generally well the diagnosis and characters used in the key provided by Robertson and Moore (2016) and their subgenus description. The labial palpomere III is longer and narrower than described as usual for the Subgenus Hylotorus, yet still within the range of variation of this character, and similar to P.abditus Nagel, 2018 in Abdel-Dayem et al. (2018). The lacinia was not dissected. The fringed setae are conspicuous, despite their tiny size. Sometimes, individuals of a few Paussus species were found to show the same type of setae with both split and unsplit apices. In these cases, the splitting is most probably an artifact caused by a treatment during or after collecting (use of certain chemicals in the killing bottle or relaxing chamber, for example). In P.minutulus sp.n. this particular shape is obviously an intrinsic character, because they are alike at all body parts where they occur.

Paussusminutulus sp.n. forms part of the P.cucullatus group sensu lato and is most similar to and possibly part of the same clade as P.abditus Nagel, 2018 in Abdel-Dayem et al. (2018) (SA) and P.rougemontianus Lorenz, 1998 (Yemen) (replacement name for Cochliopaussusrougemonti Luna de Carvalho, 1989). It differs from P.abditus by the slightly shorter pronotum, the less compressed and dilated hind leg, the absence of a distinct subbasal antennal trichome, the smaller extension of the excavation at the posterior antennal club, the large, thick, apically truncated posterior basal projection of the antennal club, the presence of fringed setae, and the clearly marked, distinct cephalic orifices.

It differs from P.rougemontianus by the slightly shorter pronotum, the less compressed and dilated hind leg, the absence of a distinct subbasal antennal trichome, the dorsal hind margin of the antennal club retracted, the presence of fringed setae, and, above all, the large, thick, apically truncated posterior basal projection of the antennal club in the new species. The new species differs from the little-known Ethiopian P.cyathiger Raffray, 1886, among others, by the long, thin peg-like posterior basal angle of the antennal club, and the longitudinal crescent margin at the external part of the cephalic pores of the latter (see Abdel-Dayem et al. 2018).

It is the smallest known Arabian Paussus and at the same time it is among the smallest Paussus at global scale (smallest measurements 3.3–3.5 mm total body length): Paussus (Subg.incertaesedis) exiguus Reichensperger, 1929, Sudan; P. (Anapaussus) asperulus Fairmaire, 1898, Madagascar; P. (Anapaussus) pipitzi Dohrn, 1884 [ssp. pictor Reichensperger, 1922, and possibly further subspecies], Madagascar and P. (Edaphopaussus) favieri Fairmaire, 1851, southwestern Europe and northwestern North Africa).

The Arabian Peninsula and adjacent regions harbour ten (with P.minutulus sp.n. included) species of Paussinae, all members of the genus Paussus Linnaeus, 1775 (see Nagel et al. 2017b; Abdel-Dayem et al. 2018). The following eight species have been recorded from the montane ecoregion of southwestern SA and Yemen (linked to the Eastern Afromontane Highlands Hotspot, see Mittermeier et al. 2004). The presence of all of them is in line with the zoogeographical affiliation of southwestern Arabian Peninsula to the Afrotropical Region: Paussusabditus Nagel, 2018 (END_SA); P.arabicus Raffray, 1886 (AFR_SAR); P.brittoni Reichensperger, 1957 (END_YE); P.cephalotes Raffray, 1886 (END_AR); P.cirenaicus Fiori, 1914 (PAL_SAR); P.minutulus Nagel & Rasool, sp.n. (END_SA); P.rougemontianus Lorenz, 1998 (END_YE) and P.thomsonii Reiche, 1860 (PAL_AFR_SAR).

Pterostichinae

Abacetini
Abacetus crenulatus

Dejean, 1831

Material examined.

892 m: 23.IV.2014, LT, 2 exs; 1,225 m: 05.V.2015, LT, 1 ex. 1,325 m: 03.VI.2015, LT, 1 ex.

General distribution and zoogeography.

BF, BJ, CI, ML, MR, SA (Abdel-Dayem et al. 2018), SN, TD. AFR species.

Published records.

Asir (Abdel-Dayem et al. 2018). New provincial records for Baha.

Remarks.

A rare species collected during spring by light trapping in Acacia thorn woodlands. Mahmoud Abdel-Dayem identified this species.

Abacetus quadrisignatus

Chaudoir, 1876

Material examined.

471 m, 10.XII.2014, HP, 2 exs. 892 m, 15.II.214, LT, 2 exs.

General distribution and zoogeography.

ET, ER and YE (Socotra Island) (Felix et al. 2012). New country record. This range exemplifies AFR realm.

Remarks.

A rare species that was collected during autumn and winter from lower elevations in area of Acacia thorn woodlands. Mahmoud Abdel-Dayem identified this species.

Scaritinae

Clivinini
Coryza beccarii

Putzeys, 1873

Material examined.

471 m, 15.XI.2015, LT, 1 ex; 10.XII.2014, LT, 2 exs; 10.XII.2014, HP, 15 exs.

General distribution and zoogeography.

EG (Sinai), ER, GN, IL, OM, SA, YE. AFR_SAR species.

Published records.

Asir (Basilewsky 1979), Jizan and Makkah (Britton 1948, Balkenohl 1994). New provincial records for Baha.

Remarks.

A frequent species that was collected during autumn at lower altitudes. The adults were caught by hand picking under stones and by light trapping along the edge of a freshwater stream. Michael Balkenohl and Ali Elgharbawy identified this species.

Dyschiriini
Dyschirius chalybeus gibbifrons

Apfelbeck, 1899

Material examined.

825 m: 15.XI.2015, LT., 1 ex. 851 m: 15.XI.2015, LT., 1 ex. 892 m: 16.II.2014, LT, 1 ex; 23.IV.2014, LT, 1 ex; 15.XI.2015, LT, 2 exs. 1225 m, 17.X.2014, LT, 4 exs. 1,325 m: 02.IX.2015, LT, 2 exs; 17.X.2014, LT, 11 exs; 14.XI.2015, LT. 12 exs. 1,474 m: 15.II.2014, LT, 1 ex; 14.XI.2015, LT., 1 ex. PAL_SAR species.

General distribution and zoogeography.

AL, AT, AZ, BG, CZ, GE, GR, IL, IR, IT, MD, RO, RS, RU (South European Territory), SA (Balkenohl 1994), SK, TM, TR, UA. PAL_SAR species.

Published records.

Asir (Abdel-Dayem et al. 2018), Baha (Balkenohl 1994).

Remarks.

A frequent species that was recorded during all seasons with more individuals were collected during autumn. The adults were caught using light traps set in Acacia thorn woodlands. Michael Balkenohl, Ali Elgharbawy and Mahmoud Abdel-Dayem identified this species.

Scaritini
Scarites striatus

Dejean, 1825

Material examined.

1,225 m: 23.VIII.2014, PT, 3 exs. 1,325 m: 08.XII.2014, HP, 2 exs. 1,666 m: 02.IX.2015, PT, 1 ex; 15.XI.2015, HP, 5 exs.

General distribution and zoogeography.

DZ, EG (including Sinai), LY, SA, TN, YE. SAR species.

Published records.

Asir, Makkah (Balkenhol 1994; Abdel-Dayem et al. 2018). New provincial records for Baha.

Remarks.

A rare species that was collected during late summer and autumn from Acacia thorn woodlands and Barbary fig shrub communities. Michael Balkenohl, Ali Elgharbawy and Mahmoud Abdel-Dayem identified this species.

Scarites terricola aethiopicus

Bänninger, 1933

Material examined.

471 m: 15.XI.2015, LT, 1 ex; 10.XII.2014, HP, 1 ex.

General distribution and zoogeography.

DZ, EG (Sinai), ER, ET, IL, OM, SA, YE. AFR_SAR species.

Published records.

Baha, Eastern Province, Jizan, Madinah, Makkah, Riyadh (Britton 1948; Balkenohl 1994).

Remarks.

A rare species collected during autumn at lower altitudes in Acacia thorn woodlands. The adults were caught along the edge of a freshwater stream by hand picking under stones and by using light traps. Michael Balkenohl, Ali Elgharbawy and Mahmoud Abdel-Dayem identified this species.

Trechinae

Bembidiini
Bembidion atlanticum atlanticum

Wollaston, 1854

Material examined.

892 m, 16.II.2014, LT, 1♂; 17.X.2014, LT, 1♀. 1,225 m: 02.IX.2015, LT, 1♀. 1,325 m: 15.XI.2015, LT, 1♀. 1,611 m: 27.I.2015, LT, 3♂, 1♀.

General distribution and zoogeography.

AE, AF, AM, AZ, BG, CV, CY, DZ, EG (including Sinai), FR, GE, GR, IL, IN, IQ, IR, KG, KZ, MA, MD, MR, MT, NE, PT, RU (South European Territory), SA, SY, TD, TJ, TM, TN, TR, UA, UZ, YE. AFR_ORR_PAL_SAR species.

Published records.

Asir, Baha and Riyadh (Basilewsky 1979; El-Hawagry et al. 2013; Abdel-Dayem et al. 2018).

Remarks.

A rare species that was collected during late summer, autumn, and winter by light trapping in Acacia thorn woodlands and Barbary fig shrub communities. Paolo Neri and Mahmoud Abdel-Dayem identified this subspecies.

Bembidion niloticum niloticum

Dejean, 1831

Material examined.

825 m, 15.XI.2015, LT, 2♂, 3♀. 851 m: 15.XI.2015, LT, 2♂, 2♀. 892 m: 16.II.2014, LT, 2♂; 15.XI.2015, LT, 1♀. 1,225 m: 03.VI.2014, LT, 1♀; 14.XI.2015, LT, 1♂, 2♀.

General distribution and zoogeography.

AE, AF, AM, AZ, BG, CN, CY, EG, GE, GR, IL, IN, IQ, IR, JO, JP, KG, KH, KP, KR, KZ, MM, NP, OM, PH, PK, RU (South European Territory), SA, SY, TM, TR, TW, UZ, VN. ORR_PAL_SAR_SJP species.

Published records.

Asir (Abdel-Dayem et al. 2018), Makkah (Britton). New record for Baha Province.

Remarks.

A frequent species that was sporadically collected during autumn, winter, and spring in Acacia thorn woodlands. Paolo Neri and Mahmoud Abdel-Dayem identified this subspecies.

Sphaerotachys conspicuus

(Schaum, 1863)

Material examined.

471 m: 2.III.2015, LT, 4 exs. 825 m, 15.XI.2015, LT, 15 exs. 851 m, 14.XI.2015, LT, 3 exs; 15.XI.2015, LT, 17 exs. 892 m: 23.IV.2014, LT, 1 ex. 1,225 m: 2.III.2015, LT, 41 exs; 05.V.2015, LT, 1 ex; 03.VI.2014, LT, 1 ex; 2.IX.2015, LT, 2 exs; 14.XI.2015, LT, 4 exs. 1,325 m: 27.I.2015, LT, 27 exs; 15.II.2014, LT, 1 ex; 2.III.2015, LT, 108 exs; 21.IV.2014, LT, 1 ex; 05.V.2015, LT, 1 ex; 03.VI.2014, LT, 6 exs; 17.X.2014, LT, 2 exs; 15.XI.2015, LT, 5 exs. 1,474 m: 15.II.2014, LT, 1 ex; 2.III.2015, LT, 7 exs; 05.V.2015, LT, 1 ex. 1,563 m: 27.I.2015, LT, 1 ex; 2.III.2015, LT, 4 exs; 05.V.2015, LT, 2 exs. 1,611 m: 27.I.2015, LT, 2 exs; 2.III.2015, LT, 1 ex; 05.V.2015, LT, 1 ex. 1614 m, 20.X.2014, LT, 3 exs. 1,666 m: 27.I.2015, LT, 1 ex; 05.V.2015, LT, 1 ex.

General distribution and zoogeography.

AE, AO, DZ, EG, ER, ET, IL, KE, LY, MR, NE, SA, SD, SO, TD, YE. AFR_SAR species.

Published records.

Asir (Basilewsky 1979; Abdel-Dayem et al. 2018), Baha (El-Hawagry et al. 2013).

Remarks.

An abundant species, which was collected during all four seasons, with highest number of individuals collected during winter (March) and lowest numbers during the late summer (September). The adults were caught by light traps set at various altitudinal zones (471–1666 m) in Acacia thorn woodlands and Barbary fig shrub communities. Mahmoud Abdel-Dayem identified this species.

Sphaerotachys tetraspilus variabilis

(Chaudoir, 1876)

Material examined.

471 m: 03.III.2015, LT, 11 exs. 851 m, 15.XI.2015, LT, 1 ex. 892 m: 23.IV.2014, LT, 2 exs. 1,325 m: 27.I.2015, LT, 53 exs. 15.II.2015, LT, 1 ex. 17.X.2014, LT, 1 ex. 1,474 m: 26.I.2015, PT, 5 exs. 27.I.2015, LT, 57 exs; 15.II.2014, LT, 2 exs; 02.III.2015, PT, 1 ex; 05.V.2015, LT, 5 exs; 18.X.2014, PT, 1 ex. 1,563 m: 26.I.2015, PT, 2 exs; 27.I.2015, LT, 7 exs; 02.III.2015, LT, 8 exs; 05.V.2015, LT, 3 exs. 1,611 m: 27.I.2015, LT, 25 exs; 02.III.2015, LT, 5 exs; 05.V.2015, LT, 25 exs; 03.VI.2014, LT, 1 ex; 17.X.2014, LT, 1 ex. 1,666 m: 27.I.2015, LT, 1 ex; 02.III.2015, LT, 1 ex; 05.V.2015, LT, 5 exs.

General distribution and zoogeography.

AE, AO, BF, CD, CI, CV, DZ, ER, ET, GM, IN, KE, ML, MR, NE, PK, SA, SD, SN, SO, TD, UG. AFR_ORR_SAR species.

Published records.

Asir (Basilewsky 1979; Abdel-Dayem et al. 2018), Baha (El-Hawagry et al. 2013), Makkah (Britton 1948).

Remarks.

A common species that was collected during autumn, winter, and spring, with a peak during winter. The adults were collected at various altitudinal zones in Acacia thorn woodlands and Barbary fig communities. Mahmoud Abdel-Dayem identified this subspecies.

Tachyura biblis

(Britton, 1948)

Material examined.

471 m: 03.III.2015, LT, 3 exs. 963 m: 03.XI.2013, HP, 1 ex. 1225 m, 02.III.2015, LT, 6 exs; 05.V.2015, LT, 2 exs. 1,325 m: 27.I.2015, LT, 2 exs; 02.III.2015, LT, 24 exs; 21.IV.2014, LT, 2 exs; 05.V.2015, LT, 19 exs; 23.VIII.2014, LT, 1 ex. 1,474 m: 27.I.2015, LT, 1 ex; 02.III.2015, LT, 14 exs; 05.V.2015, LT, 8 exs. 1,563 m: 02.III.2015, LT, 3 exs; 05.V.2015, LT, 6 exs. 1,611 m: 02.III.2015, LT, 2 exs; 21.IV.2014, LT, 1 ex; 05.V.2015, LT, 3 exs; 03.VI.2014, SW, 1 ex; 27.VII.2015, LT, 1 ex. 1,666 m: 05.V.2015, LT, 1 ex; 27.VII.2015, LT, 1 ex; 17.X.2014, LT, 1 ex.

General distribution and zoogeography.

AE, DJ, DZ, IR, MR, NE, SA, TD, YE. AFR_SAR species.

Published records.

Asir (Abdel-Dayem et al. 2018), Riyadh (Basilewsky 1979).

Remarks.

A common species, which was collected during all seasons of the year with the peak reached during winter (March). The adults were collected from both major plant communities in the SANR and from a wide altitudinal range (471–1666 m). Mahmoud Abdel-Dayem identified this species.

Trechini
Perileptus areolatus

Creutzer, 1799

Material examined.

1,225 m: 27.I.2015, LT, 2 exs; 02.III.2015, LT, 11 exs; 21.IV.2014, LT, 1 ex. 1,325 m: 27.I.2015, LT, 1 ex; 02.III.2015, LT, 2 exs; 05.V.2015, 2 exs. 1,474 m: 27.I.2015, LT, 2 exs; 02.III.2015, LT, 2 exs. 1,563 m: 21.IV.2014, LT, 1 ex; 05.V.2015, LT, 1 ex. 1,611 m: 27.I.2015, LT, 1 ex. 1,666 m: 03.V.2015, PT, 1 ex.

General distribution and zoogeography.

AL, AM, AT, AZ, BA, BE, BG, CH, CZ, DE, DZ, ES, FR, GB, GE, GR, HR, HU, IE, IL, IR, IT, LT, LV, MA, MD, MK, NO, PL, PT, RO, RU, SA, SE, SI, SK, SY, TN, TR, UA. PAL_SAR species.

Published records.

Makkah (Britton 1948). New record for Baha Province.

Remarks.

A frequent species that was collected during winter and spring from Acacia thorn woodlands and Barbary fig communities. Mahmoud Abdel-Dayem identified this species.

Perileptus rutilus

Schaum, 1860

Material examined.

471 m: 03.III.2015, LT, 2 exs; 10.XII.2014, HP, 1 ex; 10.XII.2014, LT, 1 ex. 1,325 m: 02.III.2015, LT, 2 exs; 05.V.2015, LT, 2 exs. 1,474 m: 02.III.2015, PT, 1 ex; 02.IX.2015, LT, 1 ex.

General distribution and zoogeography.

EG, SA (Abdel-Dayem et al. 2018), SD, TD, YE. SAR species.

Published records.

Asir (Abdel-Dayem et al. 2018). New provincial record for Baha.

Remarks.

A rare species that was collected during all seasons from Acacia thorn woodlands. Mahmoud Abdel-Dayem identified this species.

Perileptus testaceus

Putzeys, 1870

Material examined.

825 m: 15.XI.2015, LT, 3 exs. 851 m: 15.XI.2015, LT, 7 exs. 1,225 m: 14.XI.2015, LT, 1 ex. 1,325 m: 14.XI.2015, LT, 1 ex; 15.XI.2015, LT, 1 ex. 1,474 m: 05.V.2015, LT, 1 ex. 1,563 m: 21.IV.2014, LT, 1 ex.

General distribution and zoogeography.

AE, DJ, ET, OM, SA (Abdel-Dayem et al. 2018), SO, YE. AFR species.

Published records.

Asir (Abdel-Dayem et al. 2018). New provincial record for Baha.

Remarks.

A frequent species that was collected during spring and autumn by light trapping in Acacia thorn woodlands and Barbary fig communities. Mahmoud Abdel-Dayem identified this species.

Discussion

The Carabidae of SA, comprising the ground and tiger beetles, has been reviewed with currently approximately 183 recognized species (Abdel-Dayem et al. 2018). However, not every SA province has been equally surveyed and studied. The highlands of the southwestern SA are a major hotspot of biodiversity (Hegazy et al. 1998; Heneidy and Bidak 2001), yet, the knowledge of the carabid diversity in this region is incompletely understood. This includes Baha Province, which includes SANR. Thirty species have been documented from Baha Province (Mateu 1986; Balkenohl 1994; El-Hawagry et al. 2013; Moore and Robertson; 2014; Häckel and Azadbakhsh 2016; Rasool et al. 2017, 2018a, b). The study of El-Hawagry et al. (2013) included the first recorded carabid species in the SANR, reporting only Paussuscephalotes. Häckel and Azadbakhsh (2016) and Rasool et al. (2018) documented 13 species in which Lebiaraeesae and Microcosmodesarabicus were newly described. It should be noted that none of these three studies specifically targeted this family for the SANR.

This study represents the first baseline inventory of the carabid beetles in SNAR, within the mountains in the southwestern Saudi Arabia. The study revealed 62 species belonging to 39 genera, 17 tribes and 10 subfamilies. This number of species represent about 33% of the total known carabid fauna of SA. Also, our study includes a new species, three species endemic to SA, six confined to Arabian Peninsula, four new country records, and 24 species recorded for the first time from Baha Province. The result expands the number of carabid species recorded from Baha to 67. The number of species in this current list is similar to that of Garf Raydah Nature Reserve (GRNR) in Asir Province (61 species), a much smaller area as compared to SANR (Abdel-Dayem et al. 2018). This may be due to the wide altitudinal range (1,150–2,820 m), high annual rainfall range (600–800 mm/annum), cool temperatures, relatively high humidity, and the presence of the last remnants of dense African pencil cedar forest, Juniperusprocera Hochst. ex Endl. (Cupressaceae) in GRNR (El-Juhany 2015, SWA 2018). Both nature reserves sharing about 64.5% (40 species) of the recorded carabid species. The Lebiini species are prevailed the carabid fauna of SNAR (30.6% of the total species), a similar finding was recently being reported from GRNR (Abdel-Dayem et al. 2018).

Biogeographically, SA is heterogeneous region that hosts an interesting mixture of biodiversity from Afrotropical, Palaearctic, and traces of Oriental realms due to its position between Africa and Eurasia (Büttiker 1979; Larsen 1984; Hölzel 1998). This mixture of taxa is also apparent in Baha Province, including SANR (El-Hawagry et al. 2016, 2017). The carabid fauna of the SANR is characterized by the prevalence of Afrotropical (28.1%) and Saharo-Arabian (19.3%) elements. The influence of the Palaearctic species is moderate (10.5%) and Oriental species is noticeably smaller (3.5%) (Fig. 3). Based on the zoogeographical analysis of the insect fauna, El Hawagry et al. (2013) suggested that the fauna of Baha Province is biologically related to the Afrotropical region rather than to the Palaearctic or Eremic zone and has little Oriental affinity. The specificity of the SANR carabid fauna is enhanced by a small fraction of endemics (5.3%). This percentage of endemic species is low compared to the percentage endemic species of the carabid fauna in Garf Raydah Nature Reserve (Abdel-Dayem et al. 2018).

Figure 3.

Figure 3.

Zoogeographical affinities of the carabid fauna of Shada Al-A’Ala Nature Reserve, southwestern Saudi Arabia. AFR, Afrotropical; COS, Cosmopolitan; END_AR, endemic to the Arabian Peninsula; END_SA, endemic to Saudi Arabia; MAD, Madagascan; ORR, Oriental; PAL, Palaearctic; SAR, Saharo_Arabian; SJP, Sino_Japanese.

In conclusion, our study provides a first account of the carabid beetle fauna of the SANR, Baha Province, in the southwestern SA. The SNAR has a relatively diverse carabid fauna (62 species), reflecting its rich flora. In its composition, the carabid fauna of SANR has almost the same number of species as GRNR, in Asir Province (Abdel-Dayem et al. 2018), and shares with the GRNR 64.5% of its species. The SNAR carabid fauna is mostly of Afrotropical origin with high influence of Saharo–Arabian and relatively little influence of the Oriental elements. The carabid fauna of the SNAR has a low level of endemism and high number of Lebiini species. Extensive surveying of the highlands in southwestern SA, may reveal further species. Beyond enhancing our knowledge of the SA carabid fauna, these results will provide useful information for guiding the conservation activities (Koivula 2011; Kotze et al. 2011) in the SANR and starting point to the future more detailed investigation on the fauna in the southwestern SA.

Supplementary Material

XML Treatment for Brachinus crepitans
XML Treatment for Brachinus dorsalis
XML Treatment for Pheropsophus africanus
XML Treatment for Calosoma imbricatum
XML Treatment for Calosoma olivieri
XML Treatment for Calosoma senegalense
XML Treatment for Calomera alboguttata
XML Treatment for Cylindera rectangularis
XML Treatment for Myriochila melancholica
XML Treatment for Myriochila nudopectoralis
XML Treatment for Chlaenius canariensis seminitidus
XML Treatment for Chlaenius flavipes
XML Treatment for Chlaenius laeviplaga saudiarabica
XML Treatment for Chlaenius pachys
XML Treatment for Tetragonoderus arcuatus
XML Treatment for Tetragonoderus quadrum
XML Treatment for Amblystomus orpheus
XML Treatment for Amblystomus
XML Treatment for Anthracus angusticollis
XML Treatment for Crasodactylus punctatus
XML Treatment for Harpalus impressus
XML Treatment for Harpalus tenebrosus tenebrosus
XML Treatment for Progonochaetus planicollis
XML Treatment for Siopelus quadraticollis
XML Treatment for Apristus arabicus
XML Treatment for Calodromius mayeti
XML Treatment for Dromius buettikeri
XML Treatment for Eremolestes sulcatus
XML Treatment for Lebia auberti
XML Treatment for Lebia nilotica
XML Treatment for Lebia raeesae
XML Treatment for Matabele arabica
XML Treatment for Merizomena buettikeri
XML Treatment for Metadromius arabicus
XML Treatment for Metadromius brittoni
XML Treatment for Metadromius
XML Treatment for Microlestes discoidalis
XML Treatment for Microlestes infuscatus fragilis
XML Treatment for Pseudomesolestes quadriguttatus
XML Treatment for Singilis discoidalis
XML Treatment for Singilis
XML Treatment for Syntomus submaculatus
XML Treatment for Zolotarevskyella rhytidera
XML Treatment for Perigona nigriceps
XML Treatment for Cymbionotum microphthalmum
XML Treatment for Microcosmodes arabicus
XML Treatment for Paussus cephalotes
XML Treatment for Paussus minutulus
XML Treatment for Abacetus crenulatus
XML Treatment for Abacetus quadrisignatus
XML Treatment for Coryza beccarii
XML Treatment for Dyschirius chalybeus gibbifrons
XML Treatment for Scarites striatus
XML Treatment for Scarites terricola aethiopicus
XML Treatment for Bembidion atlanticum atlanticum
XML Treatment for Bembidion niloticum niloticum
XML Treatment for Sphaerotachys conspicuus
XML Treatment for Sphaerotachys tetraspilus variabilis
XML Treatment for Tachyura biblis
XML Treatment for Perileptus areolatus
XML Treatment for Perileptus rutilus
XML Treatment for Perileptus testaceus

Acknowledgments

We are grateful to the Saudi Wildlife Authority (SWA) for the opportunity to visit the Shada Al-A’Ala Nature Reserve (SANR). Special thanks are due to the staff at the SANR who facilitated the work in the reserve. We greatly appreciate the field assistance and specimen processing provided by the King Saud University Museum of Arthropods members. We acknowledge the identification and confirmation of carabid species kindly provided by the following specialists: Alexander Anichtchenko, Daugavpils University, Institute of Systematic Biology, Daugavpils, Latvia; Bernd Jaeger, Natural History Museum, Berlin, Germany; Boris Kataev, Zoological Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, Petersburg, Russia; David W. Wrase, Gusow-Platkow, Germany; Erich Kirschenhofer, Natural History Museum Wien, Austria; Jürgen Wiesner, Wolfsburg, Germany; Martin Häckel, Czech University of Life Sciences, Prague, Czech Republic; Michael Balkenohl, Bonstetten, Switzerland; Paolo Neri, San Lorenzo in Noceto, Forlì, Italia; and Ron Felix, Naturalis Biodiversity Center Leiden, The Netherlands. We express our gratitude to Jacob Thomas, Herbarium, Department of Botany & Microbiology, College of Science, King Saud University, Saudi Arabia, for plant identification. We thank Boris Kondratieff, Department of Bioagricultural Sciences and Pest Management, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado, USA, for his critically reviewing and valuable comments. We extend their sincere appreciation to the Deanship of Scientific Research at King Saud University, Saudi Arabia, for its funding of this research group number (RGP–1438–082).

Citation

Abdel-Dayem MS, Elgharbawy AA, Rasool I, Nagel P, Aldhafer HM (2019) The Carabidae (Coleoptera) of Shada Al-A’Ala Nature Reserve, Southwestern Saudi Arabia, with description of a new species of Paussinae. ZooKeys 812: 93–131. https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.812.30937

References

  1. Abdel-Dayem MS, Fadl HH, El-Torkey AM, Elgharbawy AA, Aldryhim YN, Kondratieff BC, Al Ansi AN, Aldhafer HM. (2017) The beetle fauna (Insecta, Coleoptera) of the Rawdhat Khorim National Park, Central Saudi Arabia. ZooKeys 653: 1–78. 10.3897/zookeys.653.10252 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  2. Abdel-Dayem MS, Kondratieff BC, Fadl HH, AlDhafer HM. (2016) Dung Beetle (Coleoptera, Scarabaeidae) Abundance and Diversity at Nature Preserve Within Hyper-Arid Ecosystem of Arabian Peninsula. Annals of the Entomological Society of America 109(2): 216–223. 10.1093/aesa/sav154 [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  3. Abdel-Dayem MS, Rasool I, Elgharbawy AA, Nagel P, Aldhafer HM. (2018) Faunistic inventory and zoogeographical analysis of the ground beetles (Coleoptera, Carabidae) of Garf Raydah Nature Reserve, Southwestern of Saudi Arabia, and description of a new species of Paussinae. Zootaxa 4514(3): 341–371. 10.11646/zootaxa.4514.3.3 [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  4. Abuzinada AH. (2003) The role of protected areas in conserving biological diversity in the kingdom of Saudi Arabia. Journal of Arid Environments 54(1): 39–45. 10.1006/jare.2001.0893 [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  5. Abuzinada AH, Al-Wetaid YI, Al-Basyouni SZM. (2005) Convention on Biological Diversity. The National Strategy for Conservation of Biodiversity in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. The National Commission for Wildlife Conservation and Development, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, 94 pp https://www.cbd.int/doc/world/sa/sa-nbsap-01-en.pdf [Google Scholar]
  6. Aldhafer HA, Aldryhim YN, Elgharbawy AA, Fadl HH. (2012) Insects associated with milkweed Calotropisprocera (Ait.) Ait. in the Ibex reserve in the central region of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. Entomological News 122(3): 233–246. 10.3157/021.122.0304 [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  7. Aldhafer HM, Abdel-Dayem MS, Aldryhim YN, Fadl HH, El-Torkey AM, Elgharbawy AA, Setyaningrum H. (2016) Diversity and composition of ground-dwelling beetle assemblages (Insecta, Coleoptera) in Rawdhat Khorim National Park, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. Journal of Arid Environments 127: 187–191. 10.1016/j.jaridenv.2015.11.007 [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  8. Al Zubaide MA, Al Zahrani HS, Al Toukhy AA. (2017) Floristic Composition and Life Forms for Wild Plants of Shada Highest Mountain and Wadi Sagamah at Al Baha Area, Saudi Arabia. Middle-East Journal of Scientific Research 25(6): 1342–1348. 10.5829/idosi.mejsr.2017.1342.1348 [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  9. Assmann T, Boutaud E, Buse J, Chikatunov V, Drees C, Friedman A-L-L, Härdtle W, Homburg K, Marcus T, Renan I, Wrase DW. (2015) The ground beetle tribe Cyclosomini s.l. in Israel. Spixiana 38(1): 49–69. [Google Scholar]
  10. Avgın SS, Luff ML. (2010) Ground beetles (Coleoptera, Carabidae) as bioindicators of human impact. Munis Entomology and Zoology 5(1): 209–215. http://www.munisentzool.org/yayin/vol5/issue1/209-215.pdf [Google Scholar]
  11. Balkenohl M. (1994) The subfamily Scaritinae Bonelli, 1809 (Coleoptera, Carabidae) from Arabia. Fauna of Saudi Arabia 14: 59–70. http://bionames.org/references/47071a3d72768c11857454130db409d4 [Google Scholar]
  12. Büttiker W. (1979) Fauna of Saudi Arabia. Zoological collections from Saudi Arabia. Fauna of Saudi Arabia 1: 1–22. [Google Scholar]
  13. CBD (2011) Convention on Biological Diversity: List of Parties. https://www.cbd.int/convention [2016-12-14]
  14. Duchesne LC, Lautenschlager RA, Bell FW. (1999) Effects of clear-cutting and plant competition control methods on Carabid (Coleoptera, Carabidae) assemblages in northwestern Ontario. Environmental Monitoring and Assessment 56: 87–96. 10.1023/A:1005963508085 [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  15. El-Hawagry MS, Abdel-Dayem MS, Elgharbawy AA, Al Dhafer HM. (2016) A preliminary account of the fly fauna in Jabal Shada Al-A’la Nature Reserve, Saudi Arabia, with new records and biogeographical remarks (Diptera, Insecta). ZooKeys 636: 107–139. 10.3897/zookeys.636.9905 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  16. El-Hawagry MS, Abdel-Dayem MS, El-Sonbati SA, Al Dhafer HM. (2017) A preliminary account of the fly fauna in Garf Raydah Nature Reserve, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, with new records and biogeographical remarks (Diptera, Insecta). Journal of Natural History 51(25–26): 1499–1530. 10.1080/00222933.2017.1347299 [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  17. El-Hawagry MS, Abdel-Dayem MS, Al Dhafer HM. (2018) A contribution to the knowledge of fly fauna in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia: new country records and an account of flies identified from Rawdhats, Riyadh Region, with biogeographical remarks (Insecta: Diptera). Journal of Natural History 52(21–22): 1377–1393. 10.1080/00222933.2018.1456575 [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  18. El-Hawagry MS, Khalil MW, Sharaf MR, Fadl HH, Aldawood AS. (2013) A preliminary study on the insect fauna of Al–Baha Province, Saudi Arabia, with descriptions of two new species. ZooKeys 274: 1–88. 10.3897/zookeys.274.4529 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  19. El-Juhany L. (2015) The magnitude of dieback on Juniperusprocera trees in the natural forests in the southwestern region of Saudi Arabia. Biosciences, Biotechnology Research Asia 12(1): 219–230. 10.13005/bbra/1655 [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  20. Geiselhardt SF, Peschke K, Nagel P. (2007) A review of myrmecophily in ant nest beetles (Coleoptera: Carabidae: Paussinae): linking early observations with recent findings. Naturwissenschaften 94(11): 871–89. 10.1007/s00114-007-0271-x [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  21. Häckel M, Azadbakhsh S. (2016) Two new species of Microcosmodes Strand (Coleoptera, Carabidae, Panagaenini) from Oman and Iran. Zootaxa 4137(4): 553–560. 10.11646/zootaxa.4137.4.7 [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  22. Hegazy AK, El Demerdash MA, Hosni HA. (1998) Vegetation, species diversity and floristic relations along an altitudinal gradient in south-west Saudi Arabia. Journal of Arid Environments 38: 3–13. 10.1006/jare.1997.0311 [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  23. Heneidy SZ, Bidak LM. (2001) Biodiversity of the Plant Species in Bisha, Asir Region, southwestern Saudi Arabia. Pakistan Journal of Biological Sciences 4(11): 1323–1330. 10.3923/pjbs.2001.1323.1330 [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  24. Holt BG, Lessard JP, Borregaard MK, Fritz SA, Araújo MB, Dimitrov D, Fabre PH, Graham CH, Graves GR, Jønsson KA, Nogués-Bravo D, Wang Z, Whittaker RJ, Fjeldså J, Rahbek C. (2013) An Update of Wallace’s Zoogeographic Regions of the World. Science 339(3): 74–78. 10.1126/science.1228282 [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  25. Hölzel H. (1998) Zoogeographical features of Neuroptera of the Arabian Peninsula. Acta Zoologica Fennica 209: 129–140. [Google Scholar]
  26. Koivula MJ. (2011) Useful model organisms, indicators, or both? Ground beetles (Coleoptera, Carabidae) reflecting environmental conditions. ZooKeys 100: 287–317. 10.3897/zookeys.100.1533 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  27. Kotze DJ, Brandmayr P, Casale A, Dauffy-Richard E, Dekoninck W, Koivula MJ, Lövei GL, Mossakowski D, Noordijk J, Paarmann W, Pizzolotto R, Saska P, Schwerk A, Serrano J, Szyszko J, Taboada A, Turin H, Venn S, Vermeulen R, Zetto T. (2011) Forty years of carabid beetle research in Europe–from taxonomy, biology, ecology and population studies to bioindication, habitat assessment and conservation. ZooKeys 100: 55–148. 10.3897/zookeys.100.1523 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  28. Larsen TB. (1984) The zoogeographical composition and distribution of the Arabian butterflies (Lepidoptera, Rhopalocera). Journal of Biogeography 11(2): 119–158. 10.2307/2844685 [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  29. Löbl I, Löbl D. (2017) Catalogue of Palaearctic Coleoptera. Vol. 1. Archostemata-Myxophaga–Adephaga, Revised and Updated Edition. Leiden, Boston, Brill, 1443 pp 10.1163/9789004330290 [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  30. Lorenz W. (2005) Systematic List of Extant Ground Beetles of the World (Insecta, Coleoptera, Geadephaga, Trachypachidae and Carabidae incl. Paussinae, Cicindelinae; Rhysodinae). Tutzing, Germany, 530 pp. [Google Scholar]
  31. Lorenz W. (2017) CarabCat: Global database of ground beetles (version Sep 2013) In: Roskov Y, Abucay L, Orrell T, Nicolson D, Bailly N, Kirk PM, Bourgoin T, DeWalt RE, Decock W, De Wever A, Nieukerken E, van Zarucchi J, Penev, L (Eds) Species 2000. Naturalis, Leiden. http://www.catalogueoflife.org/col [Accessed on: 2017-10-22]
  32. Luna de Carvalho E. (1989) Essai monographique des Coléoptères Protopaussines et Paussines. Memórias do Instituto de Investigação Científica Tropical 2(70)[1987]: 1–1028. https://searchworks.stanford.edu/view/2405152
  33. Mateu J. (1979) Fam. Carabidae, Coleoptera, Subfam. Lebiinae. Fauna of Saudi Arabia 1: 147–155. https://eurekamag.com/research/000/683/000683806.php [Google Scholar]
  34. Mateu J. (1986) Lebiinae and Brachininae of Saudi Arabia (Coleoptera, Carabidae). Fauna of Saudi Arabia 8: 198–217. https://eurekamag.com/research/001/875/001875485.php [Google Scholar]
  35. Mateu J. (1990) Carabiques recoltes au Nord-Yemen par M.G. de rougemont. Bollettino del Museo Regionale di Scienze Naturali di Torino 8: 23–44. [Google Scholar]
  36. Mittermeier RA, Robles-Gil P, Hoffmann M, Pilgrim J D, Brooks TB, Mittermeier CG, Lamoreux JL, Fonseca GAB. (2004) Hotspots Revisited: Earth’s Biologically Richest and Most Endangered Ecoregions. CEMEX, Mexico, 392 pp. [Google Scholar]
  37. Moore W, Robertson JA. (2014) Explosive Adaptive Radiation and Extreme Phenotypic Diversity within Ant-Nest Beetles. Current Biology 24: 2435–2439. 10.1016/j.cub.2014.09.022 [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  38. Nagel P. (1982) Insects of Saudi Arabia. Coleoptera: Fam. Carabidae, Subfam. Paussinae. Fauna of Saudi Arabia 4: 99–107. [Google Scholar]
  39. Nagel P, Robertson JA, Moore W. (2017a) New Nomenclatural and Taxonomic Acts, and Comments. Carabidae: Paussinae: Paussini. In: Löbl I, Löbl D. (Eds) Catalogue of Palaearctic Coleoptera.Vol.1. ArchostemataMyxophagaAdephaga, Revised and Updated Edition. Leiden, Boston, Brill, 12–18.
  40. Nagel P, Robertson JA, Moore W. (2017b) Catalogue. Subfamily Paussinae Latreille, 1806. In: Löbl I, Löbl D. (Eds) Catalogue of Palaearctic Coleoptera.Vol. 1. ArchostemataMyxophagaAdephaga, Revised and Updated Edition. Brill, Leiden/Boston, 466–470.
  41. Nasir WM, Katbeh-Bader A. (2017) Annotated checklist of the ground beetles (Coleoptera: Carabidae) of Jordan. Zoology and Ecology 27(3–4): 269–0291. 10.1080/21658005.2017.1400217 [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  42. Rainio J, Niemelä J. (2003) Ground beetles (Coleoptera, Carabidae) as bioindicators. Biodiversity and Conservation 12(3): 487–506. 10.1023/A:1022412617568 [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  43. Rasool I, Abdel-Dayem MS, Felix RF, Aldhafer HM. (2018a) A review of subtribe Lebiina Bonelli, 1810 (Lebiini, Carabidae, Coleoptera) in Southwest of Saudi Arabia. Zootaxa 4379(1): 87–102. 10.11646/zootaxa.4379.1.5 [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  44. Rasool I, Abdel-Dayem MS, Felix RF, Aldhafer HM. (2018b) The Dromiusina Bonelli, 1810 of southwestern Saudi Arabia with description of a new species (Coleoptera, Carabidae, Lebiini). ZooKeys 771: 73–103. 10.3897/zookeys.771.24165 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  45. Rasool I, Felix RF, Abdel-Dayem MS, Aldhafer HM. (2017) A review of subtribe Cymindidina Laporte, 1834 (Coleoptera, Carabidae, Lebiini) in Southwestern Saudi Arabia, with descriptions of two new species. Zootaxa 4236(1): 157–171. 10.11646/zootaxa.4236.1.9 [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  46. Robertson JR, Moore W. (2016) Phylogeny of Paussus L. (Carabidae: Paussinae): unravelling morphological convergence associated with myrmecophilous life histories. Systematic Entomology 42(1): 134–170. 10.1111/syen.12205 [“January 2017” but first published online: 28 September 2016, see p. 170, footer] [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  47. Schmidt DL, Hadley DG, Greenwood WR, Gonzalez L, Coleman RG, Brown GF. (1972) Stratigraphy and Tectonism of the Southern part of the Precambrian Shield of Saudi Arabia. U.S. Geological Survey, Saudi Arabian Project Report 139, 36 pp. [Google Scholar]
  48. Sciaky R, Vigna-Taglianti A. (2003) Observations on the systematics of the tribe Tachyini (Coleoptera, Carabidae). Bollettino della Societa entmologica Italiana 135(2): 79–96. https://eurekamag.com/research/004/253/004253925.php [Google Scholar]
  49. Sharaf MR, Abdel-Dayem MS, Al Dhafer HM, Aldawood AS. (2013) The ants (Hymenoptera, Formicidae) of Rawdhat Khorim Nature Preserve, Saudi Arabia, with description of a new species of the genus Tetramorium Mayr. Zootaxa 3709(6): 565–580. 10.11646/zootaxa.3709.6.6 [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  50. SWA (2018) Protected Areas. Saudi Wildlife Commission. https://www.swa.gov.sa/en [2018-5-15]
  51. Thiele HU. (1977) Carabid beetles in their environments. Springer, Berlin, 369 pp 10.1007/978-3-642-81154-8 [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  52. Thomas J, El-Sheikh MA, Alatar AA. (2017) Endemics and endangered species in the biodiversity hotspot of the Shada Mountains, Saudi Arabia. Journal of Arid Land 9(1): 109–21. 10.1007/s40333-016-0025-8 [DOI] [Google Scholar]

Associated Data

This section collects any data citations, data availability statements, or supplementary materials included in this article.

Supplementary Materials

XML Treatment for Brachinus crepitans
XML Treatment for Brachinus dorsalis
XML Treatment for Pheropsophus africanus
XML Treatment for Calosoma imbricatum
XML Treatment for Calosoma olivieri
XML Treatment for Calosoma senegalense
XML Treatment for Calomera alboguttata
XML Treatment for Cylindera rectangularis
XML Treatment for Myriochila melancholica
XML Treatment for Myriochila nudopectoralis
XML Treatment for Chlaenius canariensis seminitidus
XML Treatment for Chlaenius flavipes
XML Treatment for Chlaenius laeviplaga saudiarabica
XML Treatment for Chlaenius pachys
XML Treatment for Tetragonoderus arcuatus
XML Treatment for Tetragonoderus quadrum
XML Treatment for Amblystomus orpheus
XML Treatment for Amblystomus
XML Treatment for Anthracus angusticollis
XML Treatment for Crasodactylus punctatus
XML Treatment for Harpalus impressus
XML Treatment for Harpalus tenebrosus tenebrosus
XML Treatment for Progonochaetus planicollis
XML Treatment for Siopelus quadraticollis
XML Treatment for Apristus arabicus
XML Treatment for Calodromius mayeti
XML Treatment for Dromius buettikeri
XML Treatment for Eremolestes sulcatus
XML Treatment for Lebia auberti
XML Treatment for Lebia nilotica
XML Treatment for Lebia raeesae
XML Treatment for Matabele arabica
XML Treatment for Merizomena buettikeri
XML Treatment for Metadromius arabicus
XML Treatment for Metadromius brittoni
XML Treatment for Metadromius
XML Treatment for Microlestes discoidalis
XML Treatment for Microlestes infuscatus fragilis
XML Treatment for Pseudomesolestes quadriguttatus
XML Treatment for Singilis discoidalis
XML Treatment for Singilis
XML Treatment for Syntomus submaculatus
XML Treatment for Zolotarevskyella rhytidera
XML Treatment for Perigona nigriceps
XML Treatment for Cymbionotum microphthalmum
XML Treatment for Microcosmodes arabicus
XML Treatment for Paussus cephalotes
XML Treatment for Paussus minutulus
XML Treatment for Abacetus crenulatus
XML Treatment for Abacetus quadrisignatus
XML Treatment for Coryza beccarii
XML Treatment for Dyschirius chalybeus gibbifrons
XML Treatment for Scarites striatus
XML Treatment for Scarites terricola aethiopicus
XML Treatment for Bembidion atlanticum atlanticum
XML Treatment for Bembidion niloticum niloticum
XML Treatment for Sphaerotachys conspicuus
XML Treatment for Sphaerotachys tetraspilus variabilis
XML Treatment for Tachyura biblis
XML Treatment for Perileptus areolatus
XML Treatment for Perileptus rutilus
XML Treatment for Perileptus testaceus

Articles from ZooKeys are provided here courtesy of Pensoft Publishers

RESOURCES