Newly discovered beetle named in honour of Canada 150 - Action News
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New Brunswick

Newly discovered beetle named in honour of Canada 150

A rove beetle discovered in New Brunswick has been named Apimela canadensis in celebration of Canadas 150th anniversary, although the insect itself was found nine years ago.

Beetle Apimela canadensis was discovered 9 years ago

Theres a new rove beetle in the province, and in celebration of Canadas 150th birthday, it's been named Apimela canadensis. (Catherine Harrop/CBC)

If you're not careful, you might miss New Brunswick's newest species.

The newly named beetle was found near the MeduxnekeagRiver west ofWoodstock in 2008, said Dr. Reginald Webster, a research scientist in Fredericton.

The beetle, which is only about two to four millimetres long, was also found in the Jacquet River Gorge in northern New Brunswick.

"It's exciting to find a species that nobody knew existed," said Webster."We knew back then it was something different."

'It means from Canada'

7 years ago
Duration 0:35
A newly discovered species of beetle in New Brunswick has been named in honour of Canada's 150th anniversary.

In honour of his discovery andin celebration of Canada's150thbirthday, the scientist has namedthe bugApimela canadensis.

Apimela is the genus name and canadensis means, "from Canada," he said.

Webster has named other beetles he's discovered after his son and other NewBrunswickers.

Potential for more

The Apimela canadensis is a small rove beetle, two to four millimetres in length, that lives in sand and gravel along river shores and streams in New Brunswick. (Catherine Harrop/CBC)

Right now his beetle is only known in New Brunswick.

Researchers are hopeful a new species will pop up in every province before the end of the year.

"We were sort of hoping we could find other species new to science from other provinces," said Webster, who researches bugs across the province. "We could have one from every province that's named canadensis."

He discoveredApimelacanadensis along the Meduxnekeag River west of Woodstock, where he was searching through gravel. He then took the bug back to his lab and observed it over the winter.

He said this is one of54 new species from New Brunswick over the past 10 years.

A mystery bug

"We haven't spent a lot of time looking into these kinds of habitats to see what we really have," he said.

Thebeetlewill be included in an upcoming book by Natural Resources Canada's Canadian Forest Service, featuring more than 400Aleocharinaebeetlespecies found in eastern Canada.

Webster is hopeful researchers will find out more about the new bug over time.

"With small beetles like this, we know very little about what they do," he said.

With files from Catherine Harrop