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Hydroptila ogasawaraensis Ito 2011

Authors :
Ito, Tomiko
Sasaki, Tetsuro
Takahashi, Chicaco
Sugawara, Hirotaka
Hayashi, Fumio
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Zenodo, 2023.

Abstract

Hydroptila ogasawaraensis Species Group Ito Diagnosis. Males of this species-group are somewhat similar to those of the H. pulchricornis Species Group of Marshall (1979), a small Palearctic group, in having a short, subacute apicoventral process on abdominal sternite VII, relatively short and annular segment IX with a narrow (longitudinally short) dorsal bridge, and an almost straight and fine phallic apparatus, but they can be discriminated from the later by the length of the inferior appendages: The relative length of the appendages to segment IX is more than 1.0 in the H. pulchricornis Species Group (Marshall 1979; Ito et al. 2011), but 0.5–0.8 in this new H. ogasawaraensis Species Group. Final instar larvae of the H. ogasawaraensis Species Group are also similar to those of the H. pulchricornis Species Group, but differ from the later by the presence of dorsal chloride epithelia on abdominal segments I–VI or a depressed oblong head capsule; in contrast, the described larvae of the H. pulchricornis Species Group species have the chloride epithelia on segments II–VI and a roundish head capsule and include H. phenianica Botosaneanu 1970, H. dampfi Ulmer 1929, and H. oguranis Kobayashi 1974 (Ito 2021). Male: Pair of anterolateral processes of sternite V each with two setae, one long and one short; sternite VII with short, subacute, ventral process; segment IX short, annular with narrowly transverse dorsal bridge; phallic apparatus almost straight; and inferior appendages moderately short. Final instar larva: Small dorsal sclerites or small dorsal chloride epithelia on abdominal segments I–VI or with depressed, oblong head capsule. Species belonging to the Group: Hydroptila ogasawaraensis, H. demersa sp. nov., H. ishiura sp. nov., H. tokoyo sp. nov., H. hahajima sp. nov., and H. nagahama sp. nov. All species are endemic to the Ogasawara Islands. Remarks: Larval morphology differs greatly between H. demersa and the other five species, but the molecular phylogeny suggests that they all belong to the same species group (Fig. 2). Japanese name: Ogasawara-himetobikera-shugun.<br />Published as part of Ito, Tomiko, Sasaki, Tetsuro, Takahashi, Chicaco, Sugawara, Hirotaka & Hayashi, Fumio, 2023, The family Hydroptilidae Curtis (Trichoptera) in the Ogasawara Islands, northwestern Pacific, with particular reference to adaptive radiation in the oceanic islands, pp. 141-164 in Zootaxa 5231 (2) on pages 160-161, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5231.2.2, http://zenodo.org/record/7576775<br />{"references":["Marshall, J. E. (1979) A review of the genera of the Hydroptilidae (Trichoptera). Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History), 39, 135 - 239.","Ito, T., Ohkawa, A. & Hattori, T. (2011) The genus Hydroptila Dalman (Trichoptera, Hydroptilidae) in Japan. Zootaxa, 2801, 1 - 26. https: // doi. org / 10.11646 / zootaxa. 2801.1.1","Botosaneanu, L. (1970) Trichopteres de la Republique Democratique-Populaire de la Coree. Annales Zoologici Warszawa, 27 (15), 275 - 359.","Ulmer, G. (1929) Uber einige deutsche Hydroptiliden. Zoologischer Anzeiger, 80, 253 - 266. https: // doi. org / 10.1002 / mmnd. 48019290302","Kobayashi, M. (1974) On two new species of Hydroptilidae from Japan (Insecta: Trichoptera). Bulletin of the Kanagawa Prefectural Museum Natural Science, 7, 67 - 70.","Ito, T. (2021) Descriptions of final instar larvae of six species of the genus Hydroptila Dalman (Trichoptera, Hydroptilidae) in Japan. Zootaxa, 4905 (3), 339 - 350. https: // doi. org / 10.11646 / zootaxa. 4915.3.3"]}

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....535ca36a0b4fd9182de8ef4c63b2a5ef
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7575300