Annotated Checklist of Chinese Cladocera (Crustacea: Branchiopoda). Part I. Haplopoda, Ctenopoda, Onychopoda and Anomopoda (families Daphniidae, Moinidae, Bosminidae, Ilyocryptidae)
Author
Xiang, Xian-Fen
Author
Ji, Gao-Hua
Author
Chen, Shou-Zhong
Author
Yu, Gong-Liang
Author
Xu, Lei
Author
Han, Bo-Ping
Author
Kotov, Alexey A.
Author
Dumont, Henri J.
text
Zootaxa
2015
3904
1
1
27
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.3904.1.1
23873305-14e7-4346-82d3-3ae3394d9754
1175-5326
287630
56FD65B2-63F4-4F6D-9268-15246AD330B1
Family
Daphniidae Straus, 1820
Daphnia
(
Ctenodaphnia
)
carinata
King, 1853
s. lat.
Records: Sars, 1903: (Kerulen He, near the outlet of Hulun Hu);
Spandl, 1925
:186/1a–b (Beijing);
Rylov, 1923
: 55 (Harbin);
Uéno, 1937
: 200 (a pond at La-ha-chan north of Qiqihar);
Uéno, 1938b
: 22/4–5 (widely distributed in Northeast
China
);
Uéno, 1938e
: 4/5 (Hulun Hu);
Uéno, 1939
: 222 (common in northeast
China
);
Uéno, 1940a
: 335/13–27 (Hulun Hu; pools at Shalong Park in Qiqihar; pools at Datong Park in Changchun; Nan Hu in Changchun; Chagan Hu at Da’an in Jilin Province; lakes at Longjiang in Heilongjiang Province; pools in Shenyang; Anshan; pools northwest Dalian; pools at Zhangbei in Hebei Province);
Uéno, 1940b
: 552 (Hulun Hu);
Chiang, 1955
: 100/I: 6; 1963:
53/I
: 4–5 (Wuli Hu);
Shen & Sung, 1962
: 33/5 (Sanmenxia Reservoir);
Chiang, 1964
: 73 (a swimming pool at Tacheng Park in Xinjiang);
Shen & Zhang, 1964
: 129 (Baiyang Dian);
Chiang & Du, 1979
: 107–109/71 (small waters at Donghu Park in Wuchang; provinces of Jiangsu, Jiangxi, Hubei, Hunan, Sichuan, Hebei, Henan, Liaoning, Jilin, Heilongjiang, Yunnan, Inner
Mongolia
, Shanxi, Shaanxi, Gansu, Qinghai, Tibet and Xinjiang);
Chen
et al
., 1989
: 416 (Bijie in Guizhou Province); often confused with
D. similis
and
D. similoides
(see below); Xiang & Yu (unpubl. data: Chenglingji, Wuhan, Jiujiang, Hukou, Anqing, Tongling, Wuhu and Nanjing section of Yangtze River; Jialing Jiang, Wu Jiang and Dongjing He; Lushui Reservoir; Dong Hu in Wuhan, Poyang Hu and Wuli Hu). Most of these identifications may refer to members of the
D. similis
group (see below), but real
D. carinata
could be present in South
China
(
Hudec 1991
).
Daphnia
(
Ctenodaphnia
)
fusca
Gurney, 1906
:
Records: cited as
Daphnia pamirensis
by
Rylov, 1930
: 110/1–4 (Pamirs); Chiang, 1983: 454/LXV: 4a–b (Tibet).
Benzie (2005)
found
D. pamirensis
to be a junior synonym of
D. fusca
.
Daphnia (Ctenodaphnia) lumholtzi
Sars, 1885
.
Records:
Shen
et al
., 1966
: 31/2–10 (Xishuangbanna);
Chiang & Du, 1979
: 104–106/69 (Taipingqiao at Simao in Xishuangbanna); Xiang & Yu (unpubl. data: Dian Chi).
Daphnia
(
Ctenodaphnia
)
magna
Straus, 1820
.
Records:
Spandl, 1925
: 185–196 (Shanghai);
Uéno, 1937
: 200 (a large pond in Qiqihar);
Uéno, 1938b
: 22/3 (widely distributed in Northeast
China
);
Uéno, 1939
: 222 (common in shallow lakes and temporary pools in northeast
China
);
Uéno, 1940a
: 328 (a pool in Qiqihar; lakes at Tailai and Taikang in Heilongjiang Province; pools in Shenyang; pools at Zhangbei in Hebei Province);
Shen & Sung, 1962
: 33/1–4 (Sanmenxia Reservoir);
Chiang, 1963b
: 52–
53
/I, 1–3 (Qinghai Hu); Shen & Sung, 1964: 61 (Lang Hu, Dingjie Hu, Tesuomotelidun Hu, Kala He, Tibet);
Shen & Zhang, 1964
: 129 (Baiyang Dian);
Shen & Sung, 1965
: 298 (Teyapu Hu, Nake Hu and nearby small lakes, pools at Rituzong, northwest Tibet);
Chiang & Chen, 1974
: 127 (widely distributed in Mount Qomolangma Region);
Chiang & Chen, 1977
: 127 (Lang Hu, Dingjie Hu, Moteli Hu, Kala Hu, Teyapu Hu and Nake Hu in Tibet);
Chiang & Du, 1979
: 103–104/ 68 (a ditch at Xiligou in Qinghai Province; provinces of Jiangsu, Anhui, Shandong, Hebei, Henan, Liaoning, Jilin, Heilongjiang, Inner
Mongolia
, Shanxi, Shaanxi, Gansu and Tibet);
Chen & Hu, 1988
: 32 (Xinjiang); Xiang & Yu (unpubl. data: Xinyunliang He in Kunming). In recent years found commonly in Qinghai, Tibet, Inner Mogolia and Heilongjiang Province by an expedition by Jinan University in 2013.
Daphnia
(
Ctenodaphnia
)
projecta
Hebert, 1977
.
A rare
Daphnia
was described from
Australia
(
Hebert 1977
), then synonymized with
D. carinata
(Benzie 1988)
. Appeared in Tamil Nadu (south
India
), too. Xiang & Yu found it in a lakelet in Jiangxi Province (unpubl. data).
Daphnia
(
Ctenodaphnia
)
similis
Claus, 1876
.
First mentioned from
China
by
Richard (1897)
, presumably from Qiqihar area, as explained in the introduction.
D. similis
has often been confused with
D. carinata
, as Richard (
loc. cit.)
himself concedes. In
China
, cited sub
Daphnia psittacea
Baird, 1850
by
Uéno, 1937
: 200/2 (a pond at Qiqihar, Nen Jiang near Qiqihar, a pond at La-ha-chan north of Qiqihar, a contaminated pond at Harbin and small ponds at Changchun);
Chiang & Du, 1979
: 106–107/70 (provinces of Jiangsu, Sichuan, Hebei and Yunnan); Xiang & Yu (Xinyunliang He in Kunming).
Benzie (2005)
synonymized the latter with
D. similis
Claus, 1876
.
D. similis
s. str.
in
China
needs to be confirmed (
Hudec 1991
), as many of these populations may belong to
D. similoides sinensis
(see below).
Daphnia
(
Ctenodaphnia
)
similoides sinensis
Gu, Xu, Li,
Dumont & Han, 2013
.
Records:
Gu
et al.
(2013)
erected a new subspecies of
D. similoides
, another taxon from
D. similis
group that might be confused with
D. carinata
and
D. similis
.
D. similoides sinensis
was described from Guangdong, Anhui, Zhejiang and Jiangsu Provinces and was recently found in Heilongjiang Province (Qiqihar) by Xu and Han in 2013. It therefore appears to extend from southern to northern
China
and most of the records of Chinese
D. carinata
may be
D. similoides sinensis
, e.g.
Mashiko, 1953
: 55/2 a–b (small ponds in Wuhan; a swimming pool on Mountain Chi-kung-shan (namely Jigongshan) in Henan Province). Also recorded from
Taiwan
as
D. similoides
(
Young
et al.
2012
)
.
Daphnia
(
Ctenodaphnia
)
tibetana
(Sars, 1903)
.
Recorded as
Daphniopsis tibetana
Sars, 1903
, by
Chiang & Du, 1979
: 122–124/79 (Yongbo Hu in Tibet; Qinghai Province); Chiang, 1983: 454–455/LXIV: 3a–
3g
(Tibet).
Glagolev (1983)
and
Benzie (2005)
regard
Daphniopsis
as a junior synonym of
Daphnia
. Rare taxon, only recorded from mountain areas of Tibet,
Mongolia
and
India
.
Daphnia
(
Daphnia
)
cristata
Sars, 1862
.
Records:
Uéno, 1939
: 223
(Jingpo Hu);
Uéno, 1940a
: 340
;
Uéno, 1940b
: 552
(Jingpo Hu);
Chiang & Du, 1979
: 118
–120/77 (Jingpo Hu).
Daphnia
(
Daphnia
)
cucullata
Sars, 1862
.
Records:
Du & Lai, 1958
:
32/II
: 5 a–b (Tai Hu);
Chiang & Du, 1979
: 120–122/77 (Er Hai at Xiaguan in Dali; provinces of Jiangsu, Anhui, Sichuan, Yunnan and Shandong); Chen
et al
., 1985: 100 (Nan Hu in Wuhan); Xiang & Yu (unpubl. data: Honghu and Jiayu section of Yangtze River; Tuo Jiang, Jialing Jiang and Xiang Xi; Poyang Hu, Dian Chi and Tai Hu).
Daphnia
(
Daphnia
)
curvirostris
Eylmann, 1887
.
Records: as
D. pulex
forma
curvirostris
by
Chiang & Du, 1979
: 112/73C (exact sampling place not mentioned). Common in
Mongolia
(
Brtek
et al
. 1984
), and possibly present in Inner
Mongolia
. In contrast, populations from the Amur basin possibly belong to
D. sinevi
Kotov, Ishida & Taylor, 2006
(Kotov
et al
. 2006)
.
Daphnia
(
Daphnia
)
dentifera
Forbes, 1893
.
Records:
D. dentifera
is a North American species ranging from the northern Mexican border to Alaska and all of
Canada
. There are problems with the identification of this species and with its separation from
D. galeata
because of introgression of the two species (Ishida & Taylor 2007;
Ishida
et al
. 2011
). In recent years, it was found in Qinghai, Tibet and Heilongjiang Provinces with identifications confirmed by DNA studies (L. Xu, unpubl. data).
Daphnia
(
Daphnia
)
galeata
Sars, 1864
. Records: as
Daphnia longispina
var.
hyalina
by
Deng
et al
. 1963
: 142–143/
III 1–3
(Poyang Hu); as
Daphnia hyalina
forma
galeata
, by
Uéno, 1938b
: 22/9 (widely distributed in Northeast
China
);
Uéno, 1938c
: 90/2 (Wudalian Chi in Heilongjiang Province);
Uéno, 1940a
: 340 (northeast
China
);
Chiang, 1979
:118/76h (northeast
China
); Xiang & Yu (unpubl. data: Lushuihu Reservoir; Er Hai). Common in large lakes and reservoirs, and almost the only pelagic
Daphnia
in southern
China
, reaching the island of Hainan in the South (Han
et al
. 2012; Xu 2013). Chinese populations need to be checked genetically and morphologically, because of confusion with at least two related species, like in
Japan
(
Ishida
et al
. 2011
). Some Chinese populations could be hybrids
D. galeata
x
D. cucullata
and
D. galeata
x
D. hyalina
, common in Eurasia (
Dlouhá
et al
. 2010
).
Daphnia
(
Daphnia
)
hyalina
Leydig, 1860
.
Records:
Uéno, 1938b
: 22/8 (widely distributed in north-east
China
);
Uéno, 1938e
: 4/6–10 (Hulun Hu);
Mashiko, 1951a
: 27 (Hankou);
Chiang, 1965
: 223 (Dong Hu in Wuhan);
Chiang & Du, 1979
: 116–118/76 (Dong Hu in Wuhan; widely distributed in
China
);
Chen, 1983
: 22 (Yichang section of Yangtze River);
Chen, 1985b
: 2 (Yichang); Xiang & Yu (unpubl. data: Yibin, Luzhou, Hejiang, Jiangjin, Chongqing, Fuling, Zhongxian, Wanzhou, Fengjie, Badong, Zigui, Yichang, Zhicheng, Zhijiang, Jingzhou, Shishou, Jianli, Chenglingji, Honghu, Jiayu, Wuhan, Ezhou, Huangshi, Jiujiang, Hukou, Anqing, Tongling, Wuhu, Maanshan, Nanjing, Zhenjiang and Nantong section of Yangtze River; Yalong Jiang, Tuo Jiang, Jialing Jiang, Wu Jiang, Xiang Xi, Huangbai He, Han Jiang and
Yuan
Shui; Lushui Reservoir; Bao’an Hu, Dong Hu in Wuhan, Hong Hu, Poyang Hu, Dian Chi, Biandan Tang, Qiandao Hu and Dongqian Hu). As
Daphnia longispina
var.
hyalina
by
Lu (1939)
: (Er Hai);
Mashiko, 1953
: 48/2 n-s (Wuhan). There are problems with differentiation of this species from
D. cucullata
and
D. galeata
(Petrusek
et al
. 2008;
Kirdiasheva & Kotov 2013
). For example,
Daphnia
of the reservoir Liuxihe in Guangdong Province had been identified as
D. hyalina
(Lin
et al
. 2011)
, but was later shown to be
D. galeata
(confirmed by DNA studies). Petrusek
et al
. (2008) regard
D. hyalina
as a junior synonym of
D. longispina
, but this question has not been finally resolved (Kirdiasheva & Kotov 2012).
Daphnia
(
Daphnia
)
longispina
O. F. Müller, 1785
s. lat.
Records:
Uéno, 1937
: 202
/3(1–2) (Oné Lake (Onénor), north of So-lun, Mt. Chingan);
Uéno, 1938b
: 22
/6–7 (widely distributed in Northeast
China
);
Uéno, 1939
: 223
(shallow bodies of water in southwestern parts of Manchurian plain);
Uéno, 1940a
: 340
;
Uéno, 1940b
: 552
(Hulun Hu; Xingkai Hu; Jingpo Hu);
Mashiko, 1951b
: 137
(Dongting Hu);
Mashiko, 1953
: 55
(small waters in Wuhan; ponds in Yueyang);
Chiang, 1955
: 100
/I: 5 (Wuli Hu);
Du & Lai, 1958
: 32
(Tai Hu);
Du & Lai, 1959
: 305
(Tai Hu);
Shen & Dai, 1961
: 137
(the Yalu River);
You, 1962
: 115
(Fuzhou, Minhou and Changle in Fujian Province);
Chiang, 1964
: 73
(a pond along left bank of Buer Jin; Kaidu He in Yanqi; the estuary of Kaidu He and the litoral zone of Bosten Hu); Shen & Sung, 1964: 61 (Lang Hu in Tibet);
Shen & Sung, 1965
: 298
(pools at Rituzong northwest Tibet);
Shen & Zhang, 1964
: 129
(Baiyang Dian);
Chiang & Du, 1979
: 114
–116/75 (Wuli Hu; widely distributed in
China
); Xiang & Yu (unpubl. data: Wanzhou and Yichang section of Yangtze River; Jialing Jiang, Xiang Xi and Huangbai He; Lushui Reservoir, Poyang Hu, Tai Hu and Wuli Hu).
D. longispina
populations in
China
are diverse (
Chiang & Du 1979
), and records range widely. All of them need to be rechecked and confirmed morphologically and genetically.
Daphnia
(
Daphnia
)
obtusa
Kurz, 1874
, emend Scourfield, 1942 s. lat.
Records: Firstly recorded as
Daphnia pulex
var.
obtusa
by
Zhang & Yi, 1945
: 4 (Dian Chi); as
Daphnia obtusa
by
Chiang, 1964
: 73–74 (a swimming pool at Tacheng Park; a small ditch in Xinjiang);
Chiang & Du, 1979
: 112–114/74 (a ditch at Tacheng Park; provinces of Jiangsu, Hubei, Liaoning, Heilongjiang, Xinjiang and Yunnan);
Shu
et al.
, 2013
: 206 (Potatso National Park in Shangri–La); Xiang & Yu (unpul. data: Dian Chi). There are several
obtusa
-like species in
East Asia
(
Kotov & Taylor 2010
), therefore Chinese populations need restudy.
Daphnia
(
Daphnia
)
pulex
Leydig, 1860
, emend Scourfield, 1942 s. lat.
Records:
Richard, 1896
: Chapoo (
viz
Zhapu) in Shanghai; Sars, 1903: 163 (a tarn located off the southern border of the Lake Dshujlju-Kól in Altai);
Spandl, 1925
: 187 (Guangdong Province);
Uéno, 1937
: 201/3 (3–5) (pools at Chen-ching=Chenqing, south of Blagoveshchensk; pools at Lung-chen=Langchen, south of Chen-ching; a pool at Wu-cha-kou=Wuchagou, west of So-lun=Suolun, Mt. Chingan=Great Khingan);
Uéno, 1939
: 223 (northeast
China
);
Uéno, 1940a
: 338/36–46 (pools in Manzhouli and Liaoning Province);
Uéno, 1944
: 409/3a–d (Yangtze delta);
Mashiko, 1953
: 50 (small waters in Wuhan; a swimming pool on Mountain Jigongshan in Henan Province);
Du & Lai, 1958
: 33 (Tai Hu);
Du & Lai, 1959
: 305 (Tai Hu);
Shen & Sung, 1962
: 33/6–7 (Sanmenxia Reservoir);
You, 1962
: 114 (Fuzhou, Minhou and Changle in Fujian Province); Shen & Sung, 1964: 61 (Dingjie Hu, Tibet);
Chiang & Du, 1979
: 110–112/72 (Chaye pond at Jiedaokou in Wuchang; widely distributed);
Chen, 1983
: 22 (Yibin section of Yangtze River);
Chen
et al
., 1989
: 416 (Chishui, Songtao, Bijie, Qianxi and Huangping in Guizhou Province);
Chen, 1990b
: 86 (the estuary of Tuo Jiang);
Shu
et al.
, 2013
: 206 (Potatso National Park in Shangri-La); Xiang & Yu (unpubl. data: Yibin, Luzhou, Wanzhou, Fengjie, Zigui, Yichang, Chenglingji, Honghu, Wuhan, Ezhou, Huangshi, Hukou, Anqing, Nanjing and Zhenjiang section of Yangtze River; Yalong Jiang, Tuo Jiang, Jialing Jiang, Huangbai He and Gan Jiang; Lushui Reservoir; Bao’an Hu, Tai Hu, Dong Hu in Wuhan and Wuli Hu). Surely there are several species under this name in
China
. Earlier Chinese authors did not separate
D. pulicaria
Forbes, 1893
from
D. pulex
, a complex rich in species. Several close relatives occur in the Palaearctic (
Crease
et al
. 2012
) and Chinese populations need to be inserted into this framework.
Daphnia
(
Daphnia
)
pulicaria
Forbes, 1893
.
Records:
D. pulicaria
has been known to be present in
Mongolia
for a while (
Brtek
et al.
1984
). In
China
, it was recorded as
D. pulex
var.
schoedleri
by
Chiang & Du (1979)
. Recently it was found in alpine lakes on the Tibet plateau and morphological identification was confirmed by DNA analysis (L. Xu, unpubl. data).
Daphnia
(
Daphnia
)
tenebrosa
G.O. Sars, 1898
. Records:
D. tenebrosa
is common in the low arctic of North
America
and North Eurasia (Hebert 1995; Sars 1898;
Benzie 2005
). There are no past records in
China
, probably due to hybridization within the
D. pulex
-
D. tenebrosa
complex (Cerny & Hebert 1999). However, it was found in alpine lakes (Tibet plateau) based on DNA information (L. Xu, unpubl. data).
Simocephalus acutirostratus
(King, 1853)
.
Records:
Shen
et al
., 1966
: 33
/ 11–14 (a pond at Yunjinhong in Xishuangbanna); cited by
Chiang & Du, 1979
: 129
/84; by
Dai & Cai, 1999
: 21
(Yunjinghong in Xishuangbanna). This is a tropical species, in
China
only recorded from Yunnan Province.
Simocephalus congener
(Koch, 1841)
. Record:
Shu
et al.
, 2013
: 206
(Potatso National Park in Shangri-La). But the authers only presented a list. Redescription needed.
Simocephalus exspinosus
(De Geer, 1778)
.
Records: as
Simocephalus exspinosus
Koch, 1841
by
Uéno, 1937
: 203 (a pool at Chen-ching);
Uéno, 1940a
: 343/67 (Liudaogou in Manzhouli);
Chiang, 1955
: 101/I: 10 (Wuli Hu);
Chiang & Du, 1979
: 127–128/82 (Wuli Hu and provinces of
Taiwan
, Jiangsu, Hebei, Jilin, Yunnan, Inner
Mongolia
and Gansu); Xiang & Yu (unpubl. data: Tuo Jiang). Cited as
Simocephalus sibiricus
Sars, 1898
by
Shi & Shi, 1994
: 407–408/11–14 (widely distributed in Heilongjiang Province) and only found in this area to date (
Shi & Shi 1996
).
Orlova-Bienkowskaja (2001)
established
S. sibiricus
as a synonym of
S. exspinosus
.
Simocephalus heilongjiangensis
Shi & Shi, 1994
.
Records:
Shi & Shi, 1994
: 403–405/1–5 (Maoershan Mountain in Heilongjiang Province). Xiang & Yu found it in
December
2012
in lily ponds in Donghu Park, Wuchang, Hubei Province (unpubl. observ.). So far, it appeared in the temperate and subtropic zone but is not common in
China
.
Orlova-Bienkowskaja (2001)
indicated that some records of
Simocephalus latirostris
from Asia actually were
S. heilongjiangensis
, while
S. latirostris
is common in the tropics and subtropics of South and Central
America
.
S. latirostris
has not been found in
China
till now, while its
congener
,
Simocephalus latirostris fujianensis
, has been reported from South
China
, see below.
Simocephalus himalayensis
Chiang & Chen, 1974
.
Records:
Chiang & Chen, 1974
: 129/2 (1–2) (the branch of Kelu’angcheng Cuo at Nielamuke in Tibet); cited by
Chiang & Chen, 1977
: 129; by
Chiang & Du, 1979
: 130/85 (Galuoweijinma Hu in Qomolangma district);
Shi
et al
. 2011
: (a temporary eutrophic pond at Mingyong Glacier near Meri Snow Mountain and a pond at Shangri-La region in Yunnan Province). Endemic of Tibet and Yunnan Province.
Orlova-Bienkowskaja (2001)
regarded it as a junior synonym of
S. exspinosus
(De Geer 1778)
. However, some differences between the two species suggest an independent status for
himalayensis
: absence of denticles on the postero-ventral and postero-dorsal rim of the valves, and a small (less then 10) number of anal teeth. A revision using a combination of morphological and molecular approaches is needed.
Simocephalus
S. himalayensis microdus
Chen, Shi & Shi, 1992
.
Record:
Chen
et al
., 1992
: 91–95/1–6 (a pond in Haerbin and seasonal waters at Daqing, Zhaolong and Lindian in Heilongjiang Province). Endemic of Heilongjiang. Redescription needed.
Simocephalus latirostris fujianensis
Xu, 2000
.
Record:
Xu
et al
., 2002
: 66
–68/1–6 (a small pool at Shaxian in Fujian Province). Endemic of Fujian Province. Redescription needed.
Simocephalus lusaticus
Herr, 1917
.
Record:
Shi & Shi, 1994
: 408–409/15–17 (Mao’er Mountain and Huma in Heilongjiang Province). Although it has unique lateral prominences on the valves, a redescription is needed, based on specimens from
China
and other regions, including its
type
locality in Europe.
Simocephalus mixtus
Sars, 1903
.
Record: as
Simocephalus beianensis
by
Shi & Shi, 1994
: 405–407/6–10 (a pond at Bei’an in Heilongjiang Province).
Orlova-Bienkowskaja (2001)
listed
S. beianensis
as a synonym of
S. mixtus
.
Simocephalus serrulatus
(Koch, 1841)
.
Records:
Poppe & Richard, 1890
: 78
(Shanghai, Lake Sitai,
viz
Tai Hu);
Uéno, 1940a
: 343
/68 (wetland in Danbi);
Zhang & Yi, 1945
: 2
(Dian Chi);
Kiser, 1948
: 315
(The Pearl River);
Chiang, 1955
: 101
/I: 9 (Wuli Hu);
Ye, 1956
: 48
(Dongqian Hu);
Du & Lai, 1958
: 33
(Tai Hu);
You, 1962
: 116
(a pond at Gongchuan in Yong’an in Fujian Province);
Shen & Zhang, 1964
: 129
(Baiyang Dian);
Chiang & Du, 1979
: 128
–129/83 (Dongqian Hu and provinces of Guangdong, Fujian,
Taiwan
, Zhejiang, Jiangsu, Hubei, Hebei, Jilin, Heilongjiang and Yunnan);
Zhang
et al
., 1994
: 178
(Wuning, Wuyuan, Yushan, Yifeng, Yingtan, Xinyu, Xin'gan, Pingxiang and Ji'an in Jiangxi Province);
Shu
et al.
, 2013
: 206
(Potatso National Park in Shangri-La); Xiang & Yu (unpubl. data: Jiayu section of Yangtze River; Gan Jiang and Xinyunliang He; Dong Hu in Wuhan, Hong Hu, Tai Hu, Wuli Hu and Dian Chi). Widely distributed but rare.
Simocephalus vetuloides
Sars, 1898
.
Records:
Uéno, 1935a
: 213
/2A–D (Shanghai);
Uéno, 1937
: 203
(swamps in the Ussuri dist. (Yüeh-pien-pao and Hei-chü-tzu));
Uéno, 1940a
: 343
/65 (Wudalian Chi);
Mashiko, 1953
: 50
(small waters in Wuhan and Puqi); Shen & Sung, 1964: 64/1–2 (Dingjie Hu, Tesuomolitedun Hu, Yangzhuoyong Hu and Kala He in Tibet);
Shen & Zhang, 1964
: 129
(Baiyang Dian);
Shen & Sung, 1965
: 299
(Daban Hu, Duoma’er He and nearby pools, small lakes and rivers nearby Nake Hu, pools at Rituzong, northwest Tibet);
Chiang & Du, 1979
: 126
–127/81 (Chagang pond in Wuchang, provinces of Guangdong, Guangxi, Jiangsu, Hunan, Hubei, Sichuan, Shandong, Hebei, Jilin, Heilongjiang, Yunnan, Gansu and Tibet);
Chen
et al
., 1989
: 416
(Tongren and Bijie in Guizhou Province);
Chen, 1990b
: 86
(the estuary of Tuo Jiang);
Zhang
et al
., 1994
: 178
(Poyang, Nanchang, Tongling, Zhangshu, Ji'an and Yudu in Jiangxi Province);
Zhang & Chen, 1996b
: 22
(Guichi and Dongzhi in Anhui Province). Xiang & Yu (unpubl. data: Jingzhou and Wuhan section of Yangtze River; Min Jiang, Tuo Jiang, Jialing Jiang,
Yuan
Shui, Gan Jiang; Lushui Reservoir; Bao’an Hu, Dong Hu in Wuhan and Hong Hu). As
Simosa vetuloides
Sars, 1916
by
Mashiko, 1953
: 57
/3 f (lakelets and ponds of Hankou; weedy pools near hot spring in Puqi; a shallow weedy pond behind railroad station of Wuchang).
Young
et al
. (2012)
found that
Taiwan
populations of ‘
S. vetuloides
’ and ‘
S. vetulus
’ belong to the same species. However, they studied only few populations from a small region; further work based on a wider coverage of Eurasia is needed to resolve this question.
Orlova-Bienkowskaja (2001)
differenciates
S. mixtus
and
S. vetuloides
by the diameter of the dorsoposterior valve prominence. From figures by Shen & Sung (1964) and
Chiang & Du (1979)
, they both look like
S. mixtus
. Both species in
China
need to be revised.
Simocephalus vetulus
(O. F. Müller, 1776)
.
Records:
Poppe & Richard, 1890
: 78
(Shanghai, Lake Sitai);
Spandl, 1925
: 193
(Guangdong Province and Beijing);
Ping, 1931
: 182
(Nanjing);
Uéno, 1932
: 247
(a small pond in the suburb of Chongqing);
Uéno, 1937
: 203
(Nen Jiang near Qiqihar; No-ho; a weedy pond at Qiqihar; a small pond at Lüshun; Jao-ho in Ussuri dist.);
Uéno, 1940a
: 343
/66 (Beiling in Shenyang);
Zhang & Yi, 1945
: 3
(Dian Chi);
Mashiko, 1953
: 50
(small waters in Wuhan);
Ye, 1956
:
47
/I: 5 (Dongqian Hu);
Du & Lai, 1958
: 33
(Tai Hu);
Huang
et al
., 1959
: 92
(Baiyang Dian);
Shen & Sung, 1962
: 35
(Sanmenxia Reservoir);
You, 1962
: 115
(Min Jiang and Fuzhou in Fujian Province);
Chiang, 1964
: 75
(sublake of Ulungur Hu; a pool in Aletai; Kongque He in Weili; a puddle in Tieganlike; Eerqisi He; a pool along left bank of Buer Jin; the left bank of Kaidu He in Yanqi in Xinjiang);
Shen & Zhang, 1964
: 129
(Baiyang Dian);
Chiang & Du, 1979
: 125
–126/80 (widely distributed in
China
);
Chen, 1983
: 22
(Yichang section of Yangtze River);
Chen, 1985b
: 2
(Yichang);
Chen, 1990b
: 86
(the estuary of Tuo Jiang);
Zhang & Chen, 1996b
: 22
(Huaibei, Feidong and Tongling in Anhui Province). Xiang & Yu (unpubl. data: Yibin, Luzhou, Hejiang, Jiangjin, Chongqing, Wanzhou, Yichang, Jingzhou, Shishou, Chenglingji, Honghu, Jiayu, Wuhan, Ezhou, Jiujiang section of Yangtze River; Tuo Jiang, Chishui He, Jialing Jiang, Huangbai He, Han Jiang, Gan Jiang; Lushui Reservoir; Bao’an Hu, Dong Hu in Wuhan, Hong Hu, Poyang Hu, Dian Chi, Tai Hu, Biandan Tang, Wuli Hu and Dongqian Hu). Common in littoral zone of lakes and other small waters.
S. mixtus
,
S. vetuloides
and
S. vetulus
could be easily confused (
Orlova-Bienkowskaja 2001
) and they all occur in
China
. Apparently, all need to be accurately revised.
Megafenestra aurita
(Fischer, 1894)
.
Records: as
Scapholeberis aurita
by
Chiang, 1963b
:
54/II
: 9–11 (a swamp downstream of Daotang He in Qinghai Province); cited by
Chiang & Du, 1979
: 146–147. Rare.
Scapholeberis kingi
Sars, 1903
.
Records: Rammner, 1928: 325 (a pool near Qiqihar);
Uéno, 1932
: 245 (a small pond in the suburb of Chongqing);
Uéno, 1937
: 202 (Nen Jiang near Qiqihar; a weedy pond at Qiqihar; pools at Chen-ching and Lung-chen; a small pond at Lüshun);
Uéno, 1938b
: 23/10–12 (northeast
China
);
Uéno, 1940a
: 342 (Qiqihaer, Angan Xi; Shuntian Park in Xinjing);
Mashiko, 1951a
: 29 (Kantang Hu and Nanmen Hu in Jiujiang);
Mashiko, 1951b
: 137 (Dongting Hu);
Mashiko, 1953
: 56/3a–e (Wuhan; Dongting Hu; small lakes and ponds in Yueyang);
Shen & Sung, 1962
: 34/8–9 (Sanmenxia Reservior);
You, 1962
: 115 (Fuzhou, Minhou, Lianjiang, Jianou and Jianyang in Fujian Province);
Chiang, 1963b
:
53/I
: 6–7 (Qinghai Hu);
Shen & Zhang, 1964
: 129 (Baiyang Dian);
Shen & Sung, 1965
: 298 (Duoma’er He, a small lake nearby Nake Hu, pools at Rituzong, northwest Tibet);
Chiang & Du, 1979
: 145–146/97 (a grassland pool north of Haiyan in Qinghai Province; provinces of Guangdong, Fujian,
Taiwan
, Jiangsu, Jiangxi, Hunan, Hubei, Sichuan, Hebei, Jilin, Heilongjiang, Yunnan, Guizhou, Shaanxi, Gansu and Tibet);
Dai & Cai, 1999
: 21 (Yunjinghong in Xishuangbanna);
Shu
et al.
, 2013
: 206 (Potatso National Park in Shangri-La); Xiang & Yu (unpubl. data: Chongqing, Jingzhou, Shishou, Jianli, Chenglingji, Honghu, Jiayu and Anqing section of Yangtze River; Yalong Jiang, Tuo Jiang, Chishui He, Jialing Jiang, Huangbai He, Han Jiang and
Yuan
Shui; Lushui Reservoir; Dian Chi and Qiandao Hu).
Scapholeberis mucronata
(O. F. Müller, 1785)
.
Records:
Spandl, 1925
: 187 (Guangdong Province; Beijing);
Ping, 1931
: 182 (Nanjing);
Uéno, 1932
: 238 (Xi Hu in Hangzhou);
Uéno, 1937
: 202 (No-ho north of Qiqihar; Jaoho, Ussuri dist.);
Lu, 1939
: 3 (Er Hai);
Uéno, 1940a
: 343/69 (Suolun);
Kiser, 1948
: 315 (The Pearl River near Guangzhou);
Mashiko, 1953
: 56 (small waters in Wuhan and Yueyang; Nanmen Hu and Gantang Hu in Jiujiang);
Chiang, 1955
: 100/I: 7 (Wuli Hu);
Ye, 1956
: 47 (Dongqian Hu);
Zheng, 1957
: 24/5 (Nanjing);
Du & Lai, 1958
: 33 (Tai Hu);
Du & Lai, 1959
: 305 (Tai Hu); Zhang, 1960: 112/4 (Daming Hu at Jinan in Shandong Province);
Chiang, 1964
: 74–75 (a swimming pool at Tacheng Park; Sublake of Ulungur Hu; Baerbagai in Aletai; rice field in Kuerle; a pool on left bank of Buerjin; the estuary of Kaidu He at Yanqi; the litoral zone of Bosten Hu); Shen & Sung, 1964: 61 (Dingjie Hu and Duoqing He in Tibet);
Shen & Zhang, 1964
: 129 (Baiyang Dian);
Chiang & Du, 1979
: 143–145/96 (fish ponds at Liyuan in Wuxi City; a small pond at IHB, CAS in Wuchang and most provinces in
China
);
Chen, 1983
: 22 (Yibin, Chongqing and Yichang section of Yangtze River);
Chen, 1985b
: 2 (Yichang);
Chen
et al
., 1989
: 416 (Yanhe, Songtao, Yinjiang, Sinan, Tongren and Bijie in Guizhou Province);
Chen, 1990b
: 86 (the estuary of Tuo Jiang);
Zhang & Chen, 1996b
: 22 (Dangshan, Quanjiao and Wuhu in Anhui Province). Xiang & Yu (unpubl. data: Yibin, Hejiang, Jiangjin, Chongqing, Fuling, Wanzhou, Yichang, Jingzhou, Shishou, Jianli, Wuhan and Ezhou section of Yangtze River; Min Jiang, Tuo Jiang, Chishui He, Jialing Jiang, Huangbai He, Han Jiang and Gan Jiang; Dong Hu in Wuhan, Hong Hu, Dian Chi, Tai Hu, Wuli Hu and Dongqian Hu). Many old records (e.g.
Ping, 1931
) do not discriminate between this and the preceding species. Both may occur in
China
, but their limits are not accurately known. Both species may meet in the Yangtze valley. In addition,
S. rammneri
Dumont & Pensaert, 1983
may occur in
China
.
Ceriodaphnia cornigera
Chiang, 1977
.
Records:
Chiang, 1977
: 286–287/1–4 (Wangtian Hu at Xishui in Hubei Province); cited by
Chiang & Du, 1979
: 142–143/95. Possibly an endemic species. Although the range is peculiar and the valve shape is distinctive, it would be useful to exclude experimentally that this is an adaptive morphology.
Ceriodaphnia cornuta
Sars, 1885
s. lat.
Records:
Mashiko, 1953
:
58/3i
–l (Wuhan section of Yangtze River; Nanmen Hu; Gantang Hu; small waters in Hankou);
Chiang, 1955
: 102/II: 11 (Wuli Hu);
Du & Lai, 1958
: 34/6, 6a–d (Tai Hu);
Chiang & Du, 1979
: 133–135/88 (Wuli Hu; Liangzi Hu; Sijia village at
Shizishan
in Chengdu; most provinces in
China
);
Chen, 1983
: 22 (Yichang section of Yangtze River);
Chen, 1985b
: 2 (Yichang);
Chen, 1990b
: 86 (the estuary of Tuo Jiang);
Dai & Cai, 1999
: 21 (Jinghong, Menglun and Menghai in Xishuangbanna); Xiang & Yu (unpubl. data: Yibin, Luzhou, Yichang, Jingzhou, Shishou, Jianli, Chenglingji, Honghu, Jiayu, Wuhan, Huangshi, Jiujiang, Hukou, Anqing, Tongling, Wuhu, Maanshan, Nanjing, Zhenjiang and Nantong section of Yangtze River; Min Jiang, Tuo Jiang, Chishui He, Jialing Jiang, Huangbai He and Han Jiang; Lushui Reservoir; Bao’an Hu, Dong Hu in Wuhan, Hong Hu, Poyang Hu, Dian Chi, Tai Hu and Wuli Hu). Populations of the
C. cornuta
group from different continents belong to a plethora of cryptic species (
Sharma & Kotov 2013
). Chinese populations await an allocation within this complex.
Ceriodaphnia dubia
Richard, 1894
.
Records:
Uéno, 1938a
: 123 (Hailar of Northwestern Manchoukuo);
Uéno, 1938d
: 166 (rice field at Uzanto near Tainan);
Chiang & Du, 1979
: 139–140/93 (
Taiwan
); Chen
et al
., 1985: 100 (Nan Hu in Wuhan);
Chen
et al
., 1995
: 29–30/1–7 (a small pond at the campus of Xiajiang middle school in Xiajiang, Jiangxi Province; Yunnan Province). Rare. Asian populations need to be revised.
Ceriodaphnia hamata
Sars, 1890
. Records:
Chiang & Du, 1979
: 132–133/87 (Ma Hu at Leibo in Sichuan Province; Nen Jiang at Dalai in Jilin Province; small lakes of northwest Yadong in Tibet); Xiang & Yu (unpubl. data: Wuhan section of Yangtze River). The status of this taxon needs to be rechecked, even in Europe, from where it was described.
Ceriodaphnia laticaudata
P. E. Müller, 1867
.
Records:
Spandl, 1925
: 188
(Wanxian in Chongqing); under
Ceriodaphnia rigaudi
Richard, 1894
by
Uéno, 1932
: 246
(a small pond in the suburb of Chongqing);
Spandl, 1925
: 188
(Guangdong Province);
Uéno, 1937
: 203
(Nen Jiang near Qiqihar; pools at Chen-ching and Lung-chen; Jaoho=Rao He);
Uéno, 1940a
: 343
/71 (Lianhua Pao in Dong’an);
Zhang & Yi, 1945
: 3
(Dian Chi);
Mashiko, 1951a
: 29
(Kantang Hu and Nanmen Hu in Jiujiang);
Mashiko, 1951b
: 137
(Hankou);
Mashiko, 1953
: 580
(small waters in Wuhan and Zhaoliqiao; Nanmen Hu and Gantang Hu in Jiujiang);
Chiang, 1955
: 102
/II (Wuli Hu);
Du & Lai, 1959
: 305
(Tai Hu);
Shen & Sung, 1962
: 35
/10 (Sanmenxia Reservoir);
Shen & Zhang, 1964
: 129
(Baiyang Dian);
Chiang & Du, 1979
: 137
–138/91 (a pond east Jiangchuan in Yunnan Province; provinces of Guangxi,
Taiwan
, Zhejiang, Jiangsu, Hunan, Hubei, Sichuan, Hebei, Liaoning, Jilin, Heilongjiang, Yunnan and Shaanxi);
Chen
et al
., 1989
: 416
(Bijie in Guizhou Province);
Chen, 1990b
: 86
(the estuary of Tuo Jiang);
Zhang & Chen, 1996b
: 22
(Guichi in Anhui Province);
Dai & Cai, 1999
: 21
(Jinghong in Xishuangbanna); Xiang & Yu (unpubl. data: Yibin and Wuhan section of Yangtze River; Tuo Jiang and Jialing Jiang; Dian Chi).
Ceriodaphnia megops
Sars, 1862
.
Record: under
Ceriodaphnia megalops
by
Ping, 1931
: 182
(Nanjing); cited by
Chiang & Du, 1979
: 135
–136/89 (Jiangsu, Shandong Province). Rare.
Ceriodaphnia pulchella
Sars, 1862
.
Records:
Chiang, 1964
: 75–76/5–8 (the estuary of Kaidu He, a still pool in Buerjin; Eerqisi He; a swamp south of Yanqi; the litoral zone of Bosten Hu);
Chiang & Du, 1979
: 136–137/90 (Xinjiang); Xiang & Yu (unpubl. data: Luzhou section of Yangtze River; Tuo Jiang; Bao’an Hu, Dong Hu in Wuhan and Hong Hu).
Ceriodaphnia pulchella pseudohamata
Bowkiewcz, 1925
.
Records:
Chen, 1990a
: 117–118/1 (Tuo Jiang at Luzhou in Sichuan Province);
Chen, 1990b
: 86 (the estuary of Tuo Jiang). Rare. Status uncertain. According to
Flössner (1972)
, this is a junior synonym of
C. pulchella
.
Ceriodaphnia quadrangula
(O. F. Müller, 1785)
.
Records:
Ping, 1931
: 182 (Nanjing);
Uéno, 1937
: 203 (a pond at Qiqihar; small ponds at Changchun; a reservoir in Kantoshu (namely Dalian), Ussuri dist. (Yüeh-pien-pao and Heichü-tzu));
Lu, 1939
: 8 (Er hai);
Uéno, 1940a
: 343/70,72–73 (Qiqihar; Jubaotun);
Du & Lai, 1958
: 34/7, 7a–b (Tai Hu);
Chiang, 1963b
: 55/12–13 (Qinghai Hu);
Chiang, 1964
: 75 (Ulungur Hu); Shen & Sung, 1964: 62 (Lang Hu, Dingjie Hu and Yangzhuoyong Hu in Tibet);
Shen & Zhang, 1964
: 129 (Baiyang Dian);
Shen & Sung, 1965
: 299 (pools nearby Duoma’er He, pools at Rituzong, Nake Hu and its tributary, northwest Tibet);
Chiang & Du, 1979
: 131–132/86 (a pool at Dadongmen in Wuchang; small lakes at Haiyan in Qinghai Province);
Chen
et al
., 1989
: 416 (Qianxi in Guizhou Province);
Shu
et al.
, 2013
: 206 (Potatso National Park in Shangri-La); Xiang & Yu (unpubl. data: Jingzhou, Shishou, Chenglingji, Honghu, Jiayu and Wuhan section of Yangtze River; Tuo Jiang, Han Jiang,
Yuan
Shui and Gan Jiang; Lushui Reservoir; Dong Hu in Wuhan, Hong Hu, Dian Chi, Tai Hu and Dongqian Hu). Under
Ceriodaphnia laticaudata
by
Zheng, 1957
:
24/I
: 6 (Nanjing). Asian populations need to be revised.
Ceriodaphnia reticulata
(Jurine, 1820)
.
Records:
Zheng, 1957
: 24/7 (Nanjing);
Chiang, 1963b
: 255/1–3 (sublake of Ulungur Hu (
viz
Buluntuo Hai) in Xinjiang);
Chiang, 1964
: 75 (Ulungur Hu);
Chiang & Du, 1979
: 140–141/94 (Xiaoxi Hu in Lanzhou; provinces of Jiangsu, Tibet, Xinjiang, Yunnan, Gansu and Qinghai); Xiang & Yu (unpul. data: Jialing Jiang). Not common. Asian populations need re-study.
Ceriodaphnia setosa
Matile, 1890
.
Records:
Chiang, 1955
: 102/12, 12a (Wuli Hu);
Chiang, 1964
: 76/ (a puddle at Tieganlike in Weili in Xinjiang);
Chiang & Du, 1979
: 138–139/92 (a fishpond at Liyuan in Wuxi; provinces of Jiangsu, Hebei, Qinghai and Xinjiang); Xiang & Yu (unpubl. data: Hong Hu, Wuli Hu and Qiandao Hu).