The long-horned caddisfly genus Oecetis (Trichoptera: Leptoceridae) in Australia: two new species groups and 17 new species
Author
Wells, Alice
text
Memoirs of Museum Victoria
2004
2004-12-31
61
1
85
110
https://museumsvictoria.com.au/collections-research/journals/memoirs-of-museum-victoria/volume-61-issue-1-2004/pages-85-110/
journal article
10.24199/j.mmv.2004.61.7
1447-2554
12209435
Oecetis scirpicula
Neboiss
Figures 10, 11, 104
Oecetis scirpicula
Neboiss, 1977: 149
, figs 804–807.
Material examined
.
Tas.
:
2 males
,
Canal
at
Interlaken
,
42°8.8'S
147°10.5'E
,
2 Feb 1966
,
G.E. Edmunds
(
ANIC
)
;
males, females,
Navarre River
,
42°9.5'S
146°8.6'E
,
12 Feb 1967
,
E.F. Riek
(
ANIC
)
;
1 male
,
Olga-Hardwood River
,
Saddle
buttongrass plain,
42°57.8'S
145°55.3'E
,
4 Apr 1977
,
Allbrook
,
Richardson
,
Swain
(
NMV
)
;
2 males
,
12 km
NNE
Bronte Park
,
42°02'S
146°33'E
,
2 Feb 1983
,
J.C. Cardale
(
ANIC
)
;
male,
2 females
,
Pelion Hut
,
3 km
S Mt Oakleigh
,
41°50'S
146°03'E
,
Feb.1990
,
E.S. Nielsen
,
lt trap
(
ANIC
)
.
Diagnosis
. Forewing (Fig. 10) length about 4 times maximum width, veins of the posterior anastomosis contiguous; in male genitalia (
Fig. 11
), abdominal segment IX produced posteriorly to form a triangular process ventral to preanal appendages and inferior appendages with distal slender distal portion twice length of basal portion.
Distribution
. Tas. (Fig. 104).
Remarks
. Although males of this species closely resemble those of
O. atarpa
, as noted above, the name
scirpicula
is retained here for these Tasmanian specimens. The two species have only slight difference in forewing venation and in the genitalia— proportions of the inferior appendages, differences that are well within the range of variability accepted for other species. Size differences, however, are considerable, the anterior wing length of around
9 mm
for
O. scirpicula
being several millimetres longer than in
O. atarpa
. In addition, females of
O. scirpicula
lack the broadly rounded dorsal lobes seen in
O. atarpa
(
Mosely and Kimmins, 1953
: fig. 203c), having in their place a pair of almond-shaped lobes.