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1.
From the Lower Cretaceous locality Khasurty, western Transbaikalia, a new genus and species, Rasnitsyrina culonga, gen. et sp. nov. are described in the family Perlariopseidae. R. desiliens (Sinitshenkova, 1987), originally described in the genus Karanemoura Sinitshenkova, 1987, is transferred to the new genus. Two new species belonging to recent families are described: Dimoula khasurtensis sp. nov. (Nemouridae) and Jurataenionema rohdendorfi sp. nov. (Taeniopterygidae). All new species are described from fossils of adults.  相似文献   

2.
A new genus, Rovnocapnia gen. nov., with new species R. atra sp. nov. and R. ambita sp. nov., from the family Capniidae, and a new genus and species Palaeoleuctra acuta gen. sp. nov., from the family Leuctridae, of the suborder Nemourina (Euholognatha), are described from Late Eocene Rovno amber. Familial assignment of one additional specimen (suborder Perlina, infraorder Perlomorpha (Systelognatha)), represented by a nymphal skin, is obscure due to its incomplete preservation.  相似文献   

3.
Two new species of the family Protereismatidae, Alexandrinia vitta sp. nov. and A. ipsa sp. nov., are described from the Upper Permian locality of Isady (Severodvinian Stage, Poldarsa Formation). The third new species Misthodotes dubius sp. nov., belongs to the family Misthodotidae.  相似文献   

4.
5.
Plecoptera, or stoneflies, is a small order of hemimetabolous insects: according to our data, more than 3,497 species have been described so far in the world. The total number of species has enormously increased in the last 30 years (2,000 species estimated in 1976) and, if the trend continues, then it will nearly double in the near future. The order is divided into the suborders Arctoperlaria and Antarctoperlaria, and includes 16 families: 12 arctoperlarian and 4 antarctoperlarian. The Arctoperlaria account for a total number of 3,179 species, and Antarctoperlaria, only 318 species. The total number of genera is 286. We give in this article the estimated number of species for each family. The fauna and diversity of stonefly in North America (650 species reported) and Europe (426 species) are best known. Nevertheless, in the last 25 years, a mean of 2.6 Plecoptera species per year were described in Europe. Stonefly-faunas of Australia (191 species, Tasmania included) and New Zealand (104 species) are relatively well-known, while our knowledge of the Plecoptera of Central and South America (95 and 378 species respectively) is poor and still not representative of the real diversity. Africa has a reduced stonefly fauna (126 species). Asian stonefly diversity (approximately 1,527 species) is much greater than that of Europe or North America despite the fact that, except for Japan and Asiatic Russia that have been well studied, our knowledge of the remaining Asiatic areas is extremely poor. Even though our data indicate the Holarctic Region as the diversity hot-spot for the order, the analysis of the specific diversity divided by family suggests also an important role of tropical stoneflies. Guest editors: E.V. Balian, C. Lévêque, H. Segers & K. Martens Freshwater Animal Diversity Assessment  相似文献   

6.
The feeding habits of 17 species of Nemouroidea stoneflies (belonging to the families Nemouridae, Leuctridae and Capniidae) from the north‐western Iberian Peninsula are described and quantified by means of gut content analyses. As a whole, fungi, followed by pollen (both from angiosperm and, in a lesser degree, Pinaceae), leaf fragments (CPOM), detritus and, more punctually, lichens and animal matter are the most common items found in their guts. Nevertheless, variations among species were observed. For a species with a flight period that extends throughout the year, Protonemura globosa, variations in the diet were noticed among seasons, with pollen being more important during the spring and summer period. Together with a few previous studies, the present one reaffirms that feeding is an important aspect of the adult life in males and females of Nemouroidea.  相似文献   

7.
New scorpionflies, Asiachorista europaea sp. nov. and Petromantis udmurtica sp. nov. (Mecoptera: Permochoristidae), and new grylloblattids, Tshepanichoptera lacera gen. et sp. nov. (Grylloblattida: Aliculidae) and Miralioma urzhumica sp. nov. (Liomopteridae), are described from the Urzhumian of Udmurtia (Chepanikha locality). Liomopterites novissimus Aristov, 2004 (Liomopteridae) is redescribed.  相似文献   

8.
Yuto Kato  Yuta Morii  Koji Tojo 《Limnology》2013,14(2):179-194
Cryptoperlan stoneflies inhabit the headwaters or upper stream areas of rivers. A molecular phylogeographic study of cryptoperlans in the Japanese archipelago and on Taiwan Island has been conducted. Altogether the mtDNA 16S rRNA region of 71 individuals from 61 populations, the mtDNA COI region of 76 individuals from 41 populations, and the nDNA Histone 3 region of 56 individuals from 52 populations were sequenced and analyzed. The respective ML, NJ, MP and Bayesian dendrograms were proposed from the sequencing data for the 16S rRNA region (362-bp), the COI region (540-bp), and the Histone 3 region (322-bp), estimated using Yoraperla uenoi as an outgroup. Based upon those data and the resulting dendrograms, it has become clear that the cryptoperlan stoneflies of the Japanese archipelago and those of Taiwan Island comprise two major clades. The first of these two major clades consists of a number of OTUs [operational taxonomic units: Cryptoperla japonica (Honshu, Shikoku and Kyushu Islands) + C. ishigakiensis (Ishigaki-jima Island) + Cryptoperla spp. (Okinawa-jima and Taiwan Islands)]. The other clade consists of the species Cryptoperla kawasawai inhabiting only Shikoku Island. Of particular note, C. kawasawai was observed to be significantly genetically differentiated from all other cryptoperlans examined. Yet, despite the fact that the specimens of C. japonica were taken from a very broad range of populations, their genetic diversity was relatively low, similar to that of C. kawasawai, which inhabits only a limited region within Shikoku Island. Furthermore, even the species C. kawasawai was revealed to be composed of two significantly genetically differentiated subclades. It is considered that this genetic structure among cryptoperlans largely reflects the geological history from the middle to upper Miocene Epoch (i.e., Tortonian stage) of the Japanese archipelago and Taiwan Island.  相似文献   

9.
Recently collected fossil beetles from the families Asiocoleidae, Rhombocoleidae, Schizocoleidae, and Permosynidae are described from the locality Vyazniki, terminal for the Permian of European Russia. The findings are represented by isolated elytra, the position of which in the natural system it is often impossible to establish; they are, therefore, described in a formal system. The oryctocenosis is dominated by schizocoleids and permosynids, which start to play an important role at the very end of the Permian. They probably include members of Adephaga and Polyphaga, the principal groups of Mesozoic-Cenozoic beetles. Each of the other two families is represented by a single specimen.  相似文献   

10.
New grylloblattids of the family Lemmatophoridae (Insecta: Grylloblattida), Artinska sojanensis sp. nov., Sylvaprisca colorata sp. nov., and Uraloprisca lisca gen. et sp. nov., from the Soyana locality (Lower Kazanian, Arkhangelsk Region) and Paraprisca solikamskensis sp. nov. from the Tyul’kino locality (Ufimian, Perm Region) are described. Two species are transferred from the genus Paraprisca to Uraloprisca gen. nov.: Uraloprisca uralica (G. Zalessky, 1952), comb. nov. and Uraloprisca causaria (Novokshonov, 2000), comb. nov. (both from the Kungurian of the Perm Region). The evolution of the family is discussed.  相似文献   

11.
New Megakhosaridae (Insecta: Grylloblattida) are described from the Permian of Russia: Ivakhosara pectinimedia gen. et sp. nov., Megakhosarina intricata sp. nov. and M. minuscula sp. nov. from the Lower Kazanian of Soyana (Arkhangelsk Region), M. magna sp. nov. from the Urzhumian of Chepanikha (Udmurtia), Kargalokhosara terraefossa gen. et sp. nov. from the Urzhumian of Kargala (Orenburg Region), and Alekhosara reticulata gen. et sp. nov. from the Severodvinian of Novo-Aleksandrovka (Orenburg Region).  相似文献   

12.
13.
A new genus and four new species are described from the Upper Mesozoic locality of Khasurty, Western Transbaikalia: Mesobaetis crispa sp. nov. and Proameletus branchiatus sp. nov. from the family Siphlonuridae s. l., Furvoneta khasurtensis sp. nov. from Mesonetidae, and Baikalogenites firmus gen. et sp. nov. from the family Hexagenitidae. One poorly preserved specimen is identified as Mesogenesia from the family Mickoleitiidae. The unique mayfly generic assemblage of this locality, its possible age, and ecology are discussed.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Two new species of the family Spilapteridae, Homaloneura brauckmanni sp. nov. and Baeoneura desperata sp. nov. are described from the Lower Permian insect bearing deposits of the Vorkuta Coal Basin. For Vorkutoneura variabilis Sinitshenkova, 1977 (Spilapteridae), the imaginal forewing and nymphal hindwings are described for the first time. The dictyoneuridan assemblage does not agree with the existing dating of these deposits as Late Permian, as the insect assemblage suggests an Early Permian age.  相似文献   

16.
Twenty-one species of the following eight genera of the family Taeniopterygidae were recorded from Russia and adjacent countries (within the limits of the former USSR): Taeniopteryx (4 species), Brachyptera (7), Kyphopteryx (2), Mesyatsia (2), Oempoteryx (1), Rhabdiopteryx (3), Strophopteryx (1), and Taenionema (1). All the species belong to the Palaearctic complex, which is subdivided into the following groups: transpalearctic (1 species), western-Palaearctic (5), Ponto-Caucasian (3: 2 endemics of the Caucasus and 1 species distributed in the Caucasus and Anatolia). Middle-Asian (3), eastern-Palaearctic (1), and Palearchaearctic (1).  相似文献   

17.
Abstract. 1. The post-emergence lateral migration of both sexes of eight stonefly species was examined in a dystrophic, fourth-order forest river in eastern Finland.
2. For this purpose, 7351 stonefly adults were collected with eighteen trunk funnels positioned in rows of six at distances of approximately 1, 15 and 60 m from the river. A further 1880 adults were also caught from the vegetation of the bank zone by sweep netting and with slit traps.
3. The species could be grouped into two types with respect to migration distance: Isoperla difformis, I.grammatica and Leuctra fusca tended to stay in the bank area, whereas Nemoura flexuosa, N.avicularis, Amphinemura borealis, L.hippopus and N.cinerea tended to disperse into the forest, so that the majority were found some distance away from the shore.
4. The males of the leuctrids, N.flexuosa and N.cinerea migrated farther than the females.
5. The sex ratio was significantly biased in all species except N.flexuosa. The isoperlids, leuctrids and A.borealis showed a significant predominance of females in the trunk funnel catches, but males were significantly dominant in N.avicularis and N.cinerea. The material caught by other methods reversed the ratio for I.difformis and N.avicularis. Comparison of the sex ratios of the species with other reports revealed marked variation and deviation from unity, much of which could be attributed to bias introduced by the sampling methods.
6. Lateral migration seems to be the first phase in the colonization cycle, although the latter as such was not studied here. Adults of Euholognatha species migrate farther than those of Systellognatha, a difference of which may be due to their ability to feed as adults.  相似文献   

18.
New taxa of grylloblattids of the family Mesorthopteridae are described from the Permian of Russia: Parastenaropodites aquilonius sp. nov. from the Soyana locality (Middle Permian); P. circumhumatus sp. nov. from the Kul’chumovo locality; and Tshermyaninus biforis gen. et sp. nov., Permorthopteron foliaceus gen. et sp. nov., Parastenaropodites pannea sp. nov., P. exossis sp. nov., Mesoidelia procera sp. nov., and M. riphaea sp. nov. from the Isady locality (Upper Permian). Two species of the genus Khosaridelia Storozhenko, 1992 (family Permotermopsidae) and one species of the genus Megakhosarina Storozhenko, 1993 (family Megakhosaridae) are transferred to the genus Parastenaropodites Storozhenko, 1996 (family Mesorthopteridae); one species of the genus Parastenaropodites is transferred to the genus Austroidelia Riek, 1954; as a result, four new combinations are established: Khosaridelia rigida Aristov, 2005 =Parastenaropodites rigidus (Aristov, 2005), comb. nov. (Vorkuta locality, Lower Permian of Russia); Khosaridelia vyatica Aristov, 2009 =Parastenaropodites vyaticus (Aristov, 2009), comb. nov. (Karaungir locality, Middle Permian of Kazakhstan); Megakhosarina intricata Aristov, 2008 =Parastenaropodites intricatus (Aristov, 2008), comb. nov. (Soyana locality, Middle Permian of Russia); and Parastenaropodites nervosa Storozhenko, 1996 =Austroidelia nervosa (Storozhenko, 1996), comb. nov. (Madygen locality, Middle Triassic of Kyrgyzstan). An identification key to species of the genus Parastenaropodites is given.  相似文献   

19.
A total of 29 species of stoneflies (Plecoptera) from 7 families were found in Belarus: Perlodidae—6, Perlidae—1, Chloroperlidae—3, Taeniopterygidae—2, Nemouridae—11, Capniidae—2, and Leuctridae—4 species. The fauna is fairly diverse and includes a number of rare species in Belarus and other European countries: Diura bicaudata, Marthamea vitripennis, Isoptena serricornis, Xanthoperla apicalis, Brachyptera risi, Protonemura intricata, Nemoura cambrica, Nemoura marginata, and Capnia bifrons.  相似文献   

20.
The insect fauna of the Lower Permian Tyulkino locality in the Perm Region of Russia is considered. New members of the orders Trichoptera and Eoblattida are described. Members of the primitive family Microptysmatidae (suborder Protomeropina) are typical of the Lower and Middle Permian deposits of Eurasia and are represented by the two genera: Microptysmella Kukalová-Peck et Willmann, 1990 and Kamopanorpa Martynov, 1928. Kamopanorpa tyulkiana sp. nov. and K. tamarae sp. nov. (Trichoptera, Microptysmatidae) and Parakhosara kamica sp. nov. (Eoblattida, Megakhosaridae) are described.  相似文献   

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