15 results on '"Drusinae"'
Search Results
2. Revision of Drusinae subfamily (Trichoptera, Limnephilidae): divergence by paraproct and paramere: speciation in isolation by integration
- Author
-
Oláh, János, Beshkov, Stoyan, Chvojka, Pavel, Ciubuc, Constantin, Coppa, Gennaro, Ibrahimi, Halil, Kovács, Tibor, Mey, Wolfram, and Oláh, János Jr.
- Subjects
Speciation trait ,incipient sibling species ,character ranking ,Drusinae ,new species ,humility and hybris ,speciation in sky islands ,organisation versus evolution ,integration versus selection ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 ,Zoology ,QL1-991 - Abstract
In the last few years we have described over 70 new incipient sibling limnephild species applying the discovered Trichoptera speciation traits of the paraproct and paramere for species recognition and delimitation. In this revision on Drusinae subfamily, comprising 177 species, we have applied these subtle, but rapid and stable speciation traits and described 49 new sibling species from the “well studied” European mountain ranges. Discussing the theoretical background we have elaborated and adapted a new character state ranking system of phenomics to revise the long-neglected taxonomy of the Drusinae subfamily and synonymised the Cryptothrix, Monocentra, Metanoea, Leptodrusus, Anomalopterygella, Hadimina genera with the Drusus genus. These old genera of artificial constructs were established exclusively by divergences of secondary sexual traits known already to have only species level ranking value. According to our new character ranking system in the Drusinae subfamily, beside the Drusus genus, only the Ecclisopteryx genus has been retained having robust generic level divegences of paraproct loss and ancestral duplication of spine organising centre on the paramere pattern. Speciation trait function of the peg-packed surface on the paraproct head in Drusus genus moved to the gonopod apices and integrated into variously shaped stimulatory organ in the Ecclisopteryx genus. In the Drusus genus the ancestral divergence of the single spine organising centre has integrated 11 species groups with remarkably stable paramere spine pattern. Based upon ancestral divergences in the paraproct architecture we have differenciated 28 species complexes inside the 11 species groups. The delineation of the 163 mostly incipient siblings species, inside the 28 species complexes with 44 new Drusus species, was based primarily on the divergences of speciation trait, that is in the stimulatory head shape of the apical arms on the dorsal branches of the paraproct. In the Ecclisopteryx genus with 14 species we have established two independent lineages both with a single species, as well as two species complexes with five new species applying the speciation trait of the genus, that is the shape divergence of the stimulatory organ on the dorsoapical surface of the gonopods. Based on the Darwinian natural selection, we do not understand how the discovered 70+49 new European incipient phylogenetic species of limnephilid caddisflies have been evolved in the isolated sky island habitats of high mountain ranges. This isolation induced speciation represents a challenge to the mechanistic reductionist concept of the natural selection. Our first trial to extract information from various disciplines to answer this question is presented in a brief theoretical discourse: (1) rethinking the status of natural selection towards postdarwinism; (2) teleology or teleonomy; (3) limits and potentials in understanding reality; (4) organisation of universe by integration; (5) what are and how the organising forces are powered to work in the emerging energy mechanisms; (6) divergence by integration; (7) divergence in isolation; (8) reproductive isolation by sexual selection; (9) shape divergence; (10) speciation traits; (11) generic ranking characters. Assessing the limits and potentials, the humility and hybris attitudes towards understanding reality, we hypothesise an integrative power of organisation, instead of simplistic natural selection, that works both in isolated and sympatric populations to maintain the integer state of the integrated autonomic entities against mutations, permutations, transmutations and perturbations. The permanent flux of these adverse, neutral or advantegous external and internal effects generates and gives rise to a responsive and balancing integrative mechanisms with comparative magnitude and multitude. This permanently balancing organisation process develops and drives a large number of interactions along various patterns of supervenient emergent mechanisms in order to integrate them into an oscillating autonomy. In isolation of the sky-islands on high altitudes, the divergences of new taxa are the adaptive autonomic byproducts of this integrative organisation. Integration and not the selection is the real force mechanism that harmonises the concerted flux of stochastic processes into reproductive isolation by sexual selection. The primacy of integration is clearly demonstrated by empirical evidences in the causes and consequences of the integrated speciation traits. Any kind of selection, artificial, natural, social or sexual, is only an emergent perturbating mechanism forced to integrate into the autonomy of an entity. This is how the entanglement of the quantum world and any supervenient integer work together through energeticism of the interactive realism. This is a must in the ontic, epistemic and semantic structural realism.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Larval morphology and phylogenetic position of Drusus balcanicus, D. botosaneanui, D. serbicus and D. tenellus (Trichoptera: Limnephilidae: Drusinae)
- Author
-
Johann WARINGER, Wolfram GRAF, Miklós BÁLINT, Mladen KUČINIĆ, Steffen U. PAULS, Ana PREVIŠIĆ, Lujza KERESZTES, Halil IBRAHIMI, Ivana ŽIVIĆ, Katarina BJELANOVIĆ, Vladimir KRPAČ, and Simon VITECEK
- Subjects
trichoptera ,limnephilidae ,drusinae ,drusus balcanicus ,drusus botosaneanui ,drusus serbicus ,drusus tenellus ,5th instar larvae ,phylogeny ,description ,identification ,distribution ,Zoology ,QL1-991 - Abstract
In a recent 3-gene phylogeny of the trichopteran subfamily Drusinae Banks 1916, molecular data clearly correlated with the morphology and feeding ecology of larvae. The largest of three main groups, the Drusinae grazer clade, exhibits an unusual larval feeding ecology for Limnephilidae, and is the most diverse group. In this paper we describe four previously unknown Drusinae larvae included in this clade: Drusus balcanicus Kumanski, 1973 (micro-endemic to Eastern Balkans), Drusus botosaneanui Kumanski, 1968 (Dinaric Western Balkans, Hellenic and Eastern Balkan, Asia Minor), Drusus serbicus Marinković-Gospodnetić, 1971 (micro-endemic to Dinaric Western Balkans), and Drusus tenellus (Klapálek, 1898) (Carpathians, Dinaric Eastern Balkans). Characteristically, the larvae of these species have toothless mandibles typical of the Drusinae grazer clade. Larvae and adults were unambiguously associated using a phylogenetic analysis based on two mitochondrial [mtCOI, mtLSU (=16S) rDNA] and two nuclear genes (nuWG, nuCAD). In addition, information on the morphology of the larvae is given and the diagnostic features necessary for identification are illustrated.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. The larva of Drusus dudor Oláh, 2017, including an updated key to larval Drusinae Banks, 1916 (Insecta, Trichoptera, Limnephilidae)
- Author
-
Vitecek, Simon, Martini, Jan, Zittra, Carina, Kuhlmann, Hendrik, Vieira, Ariane, and Waringer, Johann
- Subjects
Insecta ,Arthropoda ,Anabolia ,Nephrozoa ,Protostomia ,Basal ,Carbotriplurida ,Circumscriptional names of the taxon under ,Palearctic fauna ,Limnephilidae ,Systematics ,lcsh:Zoology ,Limnephiloidea ,morphology ,Panorpida ,distribution ,Bilateria ,Animalia ,Eumetabola ,lcsh:QL1-991 ,Invertebrata ,Identification Key ,Taxonomy ,Pterygota ,Cenozoic ,Trichoptera ,Alps ,Hexapoda ,Cephalornis ,description distribution identification larval taxonomy morphology Palearctic fauna ,Drusinae ,Strashila incredibilis ,Drusus ,Circumscriptional names ,Terrindusia ,Europe ,Boltonocostidae ,Notchia ,Circumscriptional name ,Uenoidae ,larval taxonomy ,Ecdysozoa ,Amphiesmenoptera ,description ,identification ,Neogene ,Integripalpia ,Coelenterata ,Research Article - Abstract
The caddisfly Drusus dudor Oláh, 2017 (Limephilidae: Drusinae) was described from the Northwestern Italian Alps. We provide a detailed description of the larva, based on material from the Italian Province of Piemonte. Information on the morphology of the 5th larval instar is given, and the most important diagnostic features are illustrated. The larva is included in an updated key to larval Drusinae where D. dudor keys together with Drusus aprutiensis Moretti, 1981, D. camerinus Moretti, 1981, D. croaticus Marinkovic-Gospodnetic, 1971, D. mixtus (Pictet, 1834), and D. nigrescens Meyer-Duer, 1875. The species can be reliably separated by the morphology of the pronotum, the shape of the metanotal sclerites, and by morphological details of abdominal sternum I.
- Published
- 2020
5. Morphological features of larvae of Drusus plicatus Radovanović (Insecta, Trichoptera) from the Republic of Macedonia with molecular, ecological, ethological, and distributional notes.
- Author
-
Kučinić, Mladen, Previšić, Ana, Mihoci, Iva, Krpač, Vladimir, Živić, Ivana, Stojanović, Katarina, Vojvoda, Ana Mrnjavčić, and Katušić, Luka
- Subjects
- *
CADDISFLIES , *INSECT larvae , *ARTHROPODA classification , *ARTHROPODA anatomy , *INVERTEBRATE morphology - Abstract
A description of the larva of Drusus plicatus Radovanović is given for the first time. The most important diagnostic characters enabling separation from larvae of the other Drusinae from the southeast Europe are listed. Molecular, ecological, and ethological features and distribution patterns of the species are given. Additionally, information on the sympatric caddisfly species of the three springs where larvae and adults of D. plicatus were found and presented. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Drusus sharrensis sp. n. (Trichoptera, Limnephilidae), a new species from Sharr National Park in Kosovo, with molecular and ecological notes.
- Author
-
Ibrahimi, Halil, Vitecek, Simon, Previšić, Ana, Kučinić, Mladen, Waringer, Johann, Graf, Wolfram, Balint, Miklós, Keresztes, Lujza, and Pauls, Steffen U.
- Subjects
- *
CADDISFLIES , *LIMNEPHILIDAE , *INSECT phylogeny , *FRESHWATER biodiversity , *AQUATIC biodiversity - Abstract
In this paper we describe Drusus sharrensis sp. n., from the Sharr Mountains in Kosovo. Males of the new species are morphologically most similar to Drusus krusniki Malicky, 1981, D. kerek Oláh, 2011 and D. juliae Oláh, 2011 but differ mainly in exhibiting (1) a differently shaped spinose area on tergite VIII; (2) intermediate appendages anteriorly curved in lateral view with broad tips in dorsal view; (3) inferior appendages with a distinct dorsal protrusion in the proximal half. Females of the new species are morphologically most similar to D. krusniki, D. kerek, D. juliae, and D. plicatus Radovanovic, 1942 but mainly differ in (1) segment X that is longer than the supragenital plate with distinctly pointed tips; (2) supragenital plate quadrangular with a distinct round dorsal protrusion; (3) a vulvar scale with a small median lobe. Results of phylogenetic species delimitation support monophyly of Drusus sharrensis sp. n. and recover it as sister to a clade comprising (D. pelasgus Oláh, 2010 + D. juliae + D. arbanios Oláh, 2010 + D. plicatus + (D. dacothracus Oláh, 2010 + D. illyricus Oláh, 2010)). The new species is a micro-endemic of the Sharr Mountains, a main biodiversity hotspot in the Balkan Peninsula. Main threats to the aquatic ecosystems of this part of the Balkan Peninsula are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Larval morphology and phylogenetic position of Drusus balcanicus, D. botosaneanui, D. serbicus and D. tenellus (Trichoptera: Limnephilidae: Drusinae)
- Author
-
Mladen Kučinić, Steffen U. Pauls, Vladimir T. Krpač, Ana Previšić, Katarina Bjelanović, Wolfram Graf, Ivana Živić, Halil Ibrahimi, Lujza Keresztes, Johann Waringer, Simon Vitecek, and Miklós Bálint
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Tenellus ,Subfamily ,food.ingredient ,010607 zoology ,Zoology ,Morphology (biology) ,Trichoptera ,Limnephilidae ,Drusinae ,Drusus balcanicus ,Drusus botosaneanui ,Drusus serbicus ,Drusus tenellus ,5th instar larvae ,phylogeny ,description ,identification ,distribution ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,drusus tenellus ,drusus balcanicus ,food ,Phylogenetics ,limnephilidae ,Clade ,Larva ,drusus serbicus ,biology ,Phylogenetic tree ,Ecology ,drusinae ,biology.organism_classification ,trichoptera ,drusus botosaneanui ,QL1-991 ,Insect Science - Abstract
In a recent 3-gene phylogeny of the trichopteran subfamily Drusinae Banks 1916, molecular data clearly correlated with the morphology and feeding ecology of larvae. The largest of three main groups, the Drusinae grazer clade, exhibits an unusual larval feeding ecology for Limnephilidae, and is the most diverse group. In this paper we describe four previously unknown Drusinae larvae included in this clade: Drusus balcanicus Kumanski, 1973 (micro-endemic to Eastern Balkans), Drusus botosaneanui Kumanski, 1968 (Dinaric Western Balkans, Hellenic and Eastern Balkan, Asia Minor), Drusus serbicus Marinković-Gospodnetić, 1971 (micro-endemic to Dinaric Western Balkans), and Drusus tenellus (Klapálek, 1898) (Carpathians, Dinaric Eastern Balkans). Characteristically, the larvae of these species have toothless mandibles typical of the Drusinae grazer clade. Larvae and adults were unambiguously associated using a phylogenetic analysis based on two mitochondrial [mtCOI, mtLSU (=16S) rDNA] and two nuclear genes (nuWG, nuCAD). In addition, information on the morphology of the larvae is given and the diagnostic features necessary for identification are illustrated.
- Published
- 2015
8. Revision of Drusinae subfamily (Trichoptera, Limnephilidae): divergence by paraproct and paramere: speciation in isolation by integration
- Author
-
J. Oláh, S. Beshkov, P. Chvojka, C. Ciubuc, G. Coppa, H. Ibrahimi, T. Kovács, and W. Mey
- Subjects
new species ,Subfamily ,biology ,speciation in sky islands ,organisation versus evolution ,Zoology ,humility and hybris ,integration versus selection ,Drusinae ,Speciation trait, incipient sibling species, character ranking, Drusinae, new species, humility and hybris, speciation in sky islands, organisation versus evolution, integration versus selection ,Limnephilidae ,Isolation (microbiology) ,biology.organism_classification ,Divergence ,Speciation trait ,lcsh:QH540-549.5 ,Genetic algorithm ,lcsh:Zoology ,lcsh:Ecology ,lcsh:QL1-991 ,character ranking ,incipient sibling species - Abstract
In the last few years we have described over 70 new incipient sibling limnephild species applying the discovered Trichoptera speciation traits of the paraproct and paramere for species recognition and delimitation. In this revision on Drusinae subfamily, comprising 177 species, we have applied these subtle, but rapid and stable speciation traits and described 49 new sibling species from the “well studied” European mountain ranges. Discussing the theoretical background we have elaborated and adapted a new character state ranking system of phenomics to revise the long-neglected taxonomy of the Drusinae subfamily and synonymised the Cryptothrix, Monocentra, Metanoea, Leptodrusus, Anomalopterygella, Hadimina genera with the Drusus genus. These old genera of artificial constructs were established exclusively by divergences of secondary sexual traits known already to have only species level ranking value. According to our new character ranking system in the Drusinae subfamily, beside the Drusus genus, only the Ecclisopteryx genus has been retained having robust generic level divegences of paraproct loss and ancestral duplication of spine organising centre on the paramere pattern. Speciation trait function of the peg-packed surface on the paraproct head in Drusus genus moved to the gonopod apices and integrated into variously shaped stimulatory organ in the Ecclisopteryx genus. In the Drusus genus the ancestral divergence of the single spine organising centre has integrated 11 species groups with remarkably stable paramere spine pattern. Based upon ancestral divergences in the paraproct architecture we have differenciated 28 species complexes inside the 11 species groups. The delineation of the 163 mostly incipient siblings species, inside the 28 species complexes with 44 new Drusus species, was based primarily on the divergences of speciation trait, that is in the stimulatory head shape of the apical arms on the dorsal branches of the paraproct. In the Ecclisopteryx genus with 14 species we have established two independent lineages both with a single species, as well as two species complexes with five new species applying the speciation trait of the genus, that is the shape divergence of the stimulatory organ on the dorsoapical surface of the gonopods. Based on the Darwinian natural selection, we do not understand how the discovered 70+49 new European incipient phylogenetic species of limnephilid caddisflies have been evolved in the isolated sky island habitats of high mountain ranges. This isolation induced speciation represents a challenge to the mechanistic reductionist concept of the natural selection. Our first trial to extract information from various disciplines to answer this question is presented in a brief theoretical discourse: (1) rethinking the status of natural selection towards postdarwinism; (2) teleology or teleonomy; (3) limits and potentials in understanding reality; (4) organisation of universe by integration; (5) what are and how the organising forces are powered to work in the emerging energy mechanisms; (6) divergence by integration; (7) divergence in isolation; (8) reproductive isolation by sexual selection; (9) shape divergence; (10) speciation traits; (11) generic ranking characters. Assessing the limits and potentials, the humility and hybris attitudes towards understanding reality, we hypothesise an integrative power of organisation, instead of simplistic natural selection, that works both in isolated and sympatric populations to maintain the integer state of the integrated autonomic entities against mutations, permutations, transmutations and perturbations. The permanent flux of these adverse, neutral or advantegous external and internal effects generates and gives rise to a responsive and balancing integrative mechanisms with comparative magnitude and multitude. This permanently balancing organisation process develops and drives a large number of interactions along various patterns of supervenient emergent mechanisms in order to integrate them into an oscillating autonomy. In isolation of the sky-islands on high altitudes, the divergences of new taxa are the adaptive autonomic byproducts of this integrative organisation. Integration and not the selection is the real force mechanism that harmonises the concerted flux of stochastic processes into reproductive isolation by sexual selection. The primacy of integration is clearly demonstrated by empirical evidences in the causes and consequences of the integrated speciation traits. Any kind of selection, artificial, natural, social or sexual, is only an emergent perturbating mechanism forced to integrate into the autonomy of an entity. This is how the entanglement of the quantum world and any supervenient integer work together through energeticism of the interactive realism. This is a must in the ontic, epistemic and semantic structural realism.
- Published
- 2017
9. Morphological features of larvae of Drusus plicatus Radovanović (Insecta, Trichoptera) from the Republic of Macedonia with molecular, ecological, ethological, and distributional notes
- Author
-
Katarina Stojanović, Vojvoda Am, Iva Mihoci, Katušić L, Krpač, Ana Previšić, Ivana Živić, and Mladen Kučinić
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Larva ,Caddisfly ,Drusinae ,southeast Europe ,larval description ,fauna ,Ecology ,Fauna ,010607 zoology ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Sympatric speciation ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Drusus plicatus ,Research Article - Abstract
A description of the larva of Drusus plicatus Radovanović is given for the first time. The most important diagnostic characters enabling separation from larvae of the other Drusinae from the southeast Europe are listed. Molecular, ecological, and ethological features and distribution patterns of the species are given. Additionally, information on the sympatric caddisfly species of the three springs where larvae and adults of Drusus plicatus were found and presented.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. New records for the Kosovo caddisfly fauna with the description of a new species, Drusus dardanicus sp. nov. (Trichoptera: Limnephilidae)
- Author
-
Ibrahimi, Halil, Kučinić, Mladen, Vitecek, Simon, Waringer, Johann, Graf, Wolfram, Previšić, Ana, Bálint, Miklós, Keresztes, Lujza, and Pauls, Steffen U.
- Subjects
Male ,Insecta ,Arthropoda ,Rhyacophilidae ,Hydropsychidae ,Leptoceridae ,Article ,Limnephilidae ,Animalia ,Animals ,Body Size ,Lepidostomatidae ,Philopotamidae ,Sericostomatidae ,Ecosystem ,Phylogeny ,Taxonomy ,Trichoptera ,Animal Structures ,Biodiversity ,Organ Size ,Goeridae ,Uenoidae ,Female ,species description ,Drusinae ,freshwater biodiversity ,Balkan Peninsula ,conservation ,taxonomy ,Animal Distribution - Abstract
The Balkan Peninsula is one of the most important European hotspots of freshwater biodiversity. The region is, however, to a large extent insufficiently investigated. Here we present data on distribution of caddisflies in one particularly understudied area, the Republic of Kosovo. Our data include the first records of Adicella altandroconia Botosaneanu & Novak and Halesus tessellatus (Rambur) for the Kosovo caddisfly fauna, and a new locality for the recently described Ecclisopteryx keroveci Previšić, Graf, & Vitecek. Further, we describe the new caddisfly species Drusus dardanicus sp. nov. from the Kopaonik Mountains. The new species belongs to the D. discophorus Species Group and differs morphologically from its most similar congeners (D. discophorus Radovanović, D. balcanicus Kumanski, and D. bureschi Kumanski) mainly in exhibiting (1) subtrianglar superior appendages ; (2) a narrow, dorsal spinate area of tergite VIII ; and (3) evenly rounded tips of intermediate appendages in caudal view. In phylogenetic analysis, D. dardanicus sp. nov. is well delineated and recovered as a sister taxon to D. osogovicus Kumanski, a species recorded from Bulgaria. The recent discovery of a new species and other rare or microendemic species presents important contributions to the knowledge on the rich freshwater biodiversity in Kosovo. These species face increasing anthropogenic pressure and threats to their conservation.
- Published
- 2015
11. Drusus sharrensis sp. n. (Trichoptera, Limnephilidae), a new species from Sharr National Park in Kosovo, with molecular and ecological notes
- Author
-
Ana Previšić, Mladen Kučinić, Steffen U. Pauls, Johann Waringer, Miklós Bálint, Lujza Keresztes, Wolfram Graf, Halil Ibrahimi, and Simon Vitecek
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,ORDO ,Insecta ,Arthropoda ,Sharr Mountains ,Limnephilidae ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,03 medical and health sciences ,Monophyly ,taxonomy ,Caddisfly ,FAMILIA ,Limnephiloidea ,Botany ,Drusus krusniki ,freshwater biodiversity ,Animalia ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Appendage ,DrususAnimalia ,biology ,National park ,Ecology ,Trichoptera ,Drusus illyricus ,Drusinae ,biology.organism_classification ,Europe ,030104 developmental biology ,TrichopteraAnimalia ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Taxonomy (biology) ,Research Article - Abstract
In this paper we describe Drusus sharrensis sp. n., from the Sharr Mountains in Kosovo. Males of the new species are morphologically most similar to Drusus krusniki Malicky, 1981, Drusus kerek Oláh, 2011 and Drusus juliae Oláh, 2011 but differ mainly in exhibiting (1) a differently shaped spinose area on tergite VIII; (2) intermediate appendages anteriorly curved in lateral view with broad tips in dorsal view; (3) inferior appendages with a distinct dorsal protrusion in the proximal half. Females of the new species are morphologically most similar to Drusus krusniki, Drusus kerek, Drusus juliae, and Drusus plicatus Radovanovic, 1942 but mainly differ in (1) segment X that is longer than the supragenital plate with distinctly pointed tips; (2) supragenital plate quadrangular with a distinct round dorsal protrusion; (3) a vulvar scale with a small median lobe. Results of phylogenetic species delimitation support monophyly of Drusus sharrensis sp. n. and recover it as sister to a clade comprising (Drusus pelasgus Oláh, 2010 + Drusus juliae + Drusus arbanios Oláh, 2010 + Drusus plicatus + (Drusus dacothracus Oláh, 2010 + Drusus illyricus Oláh, 2010)). The new species is a micro-endemic of the Sharr Mountains, a main biodiversity hotspot in the Balkan Peninsula. Main threats to the aquatic ecosystems of this part of the Balkan Peninsula are discussed.
- Published
- 2015
12. Description of two new filtering carnivore Drusus species (Limnephilidae, Drusinae) from the Western Balkans
- Author
-
Simon Vitecek, Mladen Kučinić, János Oláh, Ana Previšić, Miklós Bálint, Lujza Keresztes, Johann Waringer, Steffen Pauls, and Wolfram Graf
- Subjects
Insecta ,Southern Europe ,Arthropoda ,aquatic diversity ,Anabolia ,Nephrozoa ,Protostomia ,Basal ,Carbotriplurida ,Mediterranean ,Circumscriptional names of the taxon under ,taxonomy ,Limnephilidae ,lcsh:Zoology ,Limnephiloidea ,Panorpida ,Animalia ,Bilateria ,lcsh:QL1-991 ,Eumetabola ,Caddisfly ,Pterygota ,DrususAnimalia ,Trichoptera ,conservation ,LimnephilidaeCephalornis ,Drusinae ,Strashila incredibilis ,Circumscriptional names ,Terrindusia ,Boltonocostidae ,Notchia ,Circumscriptional name ,Uenoidae ,Ecdysozoa ,Amphiesmenoptera ,Integripalpia ,Research Article ,Coelenterata - Abstract
Two new species of the genus Drusus (Trichoptera, Limnephilidae, Drusinae) from the Western Balkans are described. Additionally, observations on the biodiversity and threats to the region’s endemic aquatic fauna are discussed. Drusus krpachi sp. n. is a micro-endemic of the Korab Mountains, Macedonia, and Drusus malickyi sp. n. is a micro-endemic of the Prokletije Mountains, Albania. Both new species are most similar to Drusus macedonicus but differ from the latter in the shape of segment IX, the shape of the tips of the intermediate appendages in lateral view, the shape of the inferior appendages, and the form and shape of the parameres. In addition, males of the European species of filtering carnivore Drusinae are diagnosed and illustrated, including Cryptothrix nebulicola McLachlan, Drusus chrysotus Rambur, Drusus discolor Rambur, Drusus macedonicus Schmid, Drusus meridionalis Kumanski, Drusus muelleri McLachlan, Drusus romanicus Murgoci and Botosaneanu, and Drusus siveci Malicky. These additions to the Western Balkan fauna demonstrate the significance of this region for European biodiversity and further highlight the importance of faunistic studies in Europe.
- Published
- 2015
13. Cryptic diversity of caddisflies in the Balkans: the curious case of Ecclisopteryx species (Trichoptera: Limnephilidae)
- Author
-
Previsic, Ana, Graf, Wolfram, Vitecek, Simon, Kucinic, Mladen, Balint, Miklos, Keresztes Ujvarosi Lujza, Pauls, Steffen U., and Waringer, Johann
- Subjects
Biodiversity ,Drusinae ,larval morphology ,adult morphology ,phylogeny - Abstract
Adults and larvae of two new cryptic, endemic caddisflies, Ecclisopteryx keroveci sp.n. and Ecclisopteryx ivkae sp.n., are described and illustrated from the Western Balkans. Phylogenetic analysis (Bayesian MCMCMC) and association of different life history stages in both cryptic species were achieved through comparison of morphological characters and mitochondrial (mtCOI and mtLSU) and nuclear (nuWG) gene sequence data. The new species form a sister clade to the widely distributed E. dalecarlica and E. guttulata, with which they were formerly misidentified. Adults differ from each other and other species in the genus by the uniquely shaped inferior appendages in males and segment X in females. The larvae differ from each other and their congeners in the shape of the pronotum, and presence and constitution of additional spines on the parietalia. Larvae of both species are grazers and prefer stony substrate. Ecclisopteryx keroveci sp.n. has a wide distribution in the Western Balkans, while E. ivkae sp.n. is endemic to Dalmatia. Our findings demonstrate the significance of the Western Balkans as a freshwater biodiversity hotspot, and accentuate the importance of research focused on freshwater biodiversity and biogeography in southern Europe.
- Published
- 2014
14. Cryptic diversity of caddisflies in the Balkans: the curious case of Ecclisopteryx species (Trichoptera: Limnephilidae).
- Author
-
Previšić A, Graf W, Vitecek S, Kučinić M, Bálint M, Keresztes L, Pauls SU, and Waringer J
- Abstract
Adults and larvae of two new cryptic, endemic caddisflies, Ecclisopteryx keroveci sp.n. and Ecclisopteryx ivkae sp.n., are described and illustrated from the Western Balkans. Phylogenetic analysis (Bayesian MCMCMC) and association of different life history stages in both cryptic species were achieved through comparison of morphological characters and mitochondrial (mtCOI and mtLSU) and nuclear (nuWG) gene sequence data. The new species form a sister clade to the widely distributed E. dalecarlica and E. guttulata , with which they were formerly misidentified. Adults differ from each other and other species in the genus by the uniquely shaped inferior appendages in males and segment X in females. The larvae differ from each other and their congeners in the shape of the pronotum, and presence and constitution of additional spines on the parietalia. Larvae of both species are grazers and prefer stony substrate. Ecclisopteryx keroveci sp.n. has a wide distribution in the Western Balkans, while E. ivkae sp.n. is endemic to Dalmatia. Our findings demonstrate the significance of the Western Balkans as a freshwater biodiversity hotspot, and accentuate the importance of research focused on freshwater biodiversity and biogeography in southern Europe.
- Published
- 2014
15. A larval key to the Drusinae species (Trichoptera: Limnephilidae) of Austria, Germany, Switzerland and the dinaric western Balkan.
- Author
-
Waringer J, Graf W, Pauls SU, Previšić A, and Kučinić M
- Abstract
A larval key of the Drusinae of Central Europe and the dinaric western Balkan is presented. Phylogeographic relationships are discussed in the light of molecular genetics, feeding ecology and larval morphology.
- Published
- 2010
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.