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Promecoderus brunnicornis Dejean, 1829 (a species of ground-beetle)

Basis for Tasmanian occurrence
Semmens, T.D., McQuillan, P.B. & Hayhurst, G. (1992). Catalogue of the Insects of Tasmania. Government of Tasmania: Department of Primary Industry, 104 pp.

TMAG collections

Classification
Order: Coleoptera

Suborder: Adephaga

Superfamily: Caraboidea

Family: Carabidae

Subfamily: Broscinae

Tribe: Broscini

Morphology
Typical length (mm): 16
Flightedness: (not yet documented)

Source literature on morphology and taxonomy (*primary taxonomic source, where identified):
Sloane, T.G. (1890). Studies in Australian entomology. No. III – on Promecoderus and closely allied genera (Carabidae). Proc. Linn. Soc. NSW 5: 189-242.
Sloane, T.G. (1920). The Carabidae of Tasmania. Proc. Linn. Soc. NSW 45: 113-178.

Ecology
Assumed larval feeding: predator
Association with dead wood or old trees: not saproxylic

Ecological attributes: — Affiliated with late-aged (ex-clearfelled) forest (Michaels, 1999) — Affiliated with mature (unlogged) forest (Michaels, 1999) — Dry sclerophyll forest can be suitable habitat (Michaels, 1999b) — Forest generalist (Grove, 2009) — Found under large logs (Grove et al., 2006).

Collection method(s) for TMAG material: — Hand collection (substrate not specified) — Hand collection from under log of Eucalyptus sp. — Pitfall trapping.

Source ecological literature:
Grove, S.J. et al. (2006). What lives under large logs in Tasmanian eucalypt forest? Tas. Nat. 128: 86-93.
Grove, S.J. & Yaxley, B. (2005). Wildlife habitat strips and native forest ground-active beetle assemblages in plantation nodes in northeast Tasmania. Aust. J. Entom. 44 (4): 331-343.
Grove, S.J. (2009c). Do wildlife habitat strips act as refuges for mature-forest carabid beetle assemblages? A case-study in Tasmanian wet eucalypt forest, Australia. For. Ecol. Manage. 259: 496-504.
Michaels, K.F. (1999a). Carabid beetles as biodiversity and ecological indicators. PhD thesis, Univ. of Tasmania, Hobart.
Michaels, K.F. (1999b). Carabid … communities in Tasmania: classification for nature conservation. In: Ponder, W. & Lunney, D. (Ed.), The Other 99%: …. Roy. Zool. Soc. NSW, pp. 374-379.

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