New species records of Suwallia Ricker, 1943 (Plecoptera: Chloroperlidae) from China, with description of the nymph of S. decolorata Zhiltzova & Levanidova, 1978
Author
Li, Weihai
Author
Murányi, Dávid
Author
Shi, Li
text
Zootaxa
2015
3994
4
556
564
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.3994.4.4
8c1c6068-f006-4d6a-834b-ef493924c790
1175-5326
242022
FFDE53F2-3AC0-4667-B262-384509133310
Suwallia teleckojensis
(
Šámal, 1939
)
Alloperla teleckojensis
Šámal 1939
. Vestnik Ceskoslovenske Spolecnosti Zoologii, 6–7: 423;
Zapekina-Dulkeit 1955
. Entomologicheskoe Obozrenie, 34: 172;
Raušer 1968
. Entomologische Abhandlungen, 34(5): 336.
Chloroperla teleckojensis
:
Illies 1966
. Das Tierreich, 82: 443.
Suwallia teleckojensis
:
Zwick, Levanidova & Zhiltzova 1971
. Entomologicheskoe Obozrenie, 50: 857;
Zwick 1973
. Das Tierreich, 94: 297;
Zhiltzova & Teslenko 1997
.
In
Tsalolikhin (ed.). Key to Freshwater Invertebrates of
Russia
and Adjacent Lands: 258;
Alexander & Stewart 1999
. Transactions of the American Entomological Society, 125: 221;
Teslenko & Zhiltzova 2009
. Key to the Stoneflies (Insecta,
Plecoptera
) of
Russia
and Adjacent Countries. Imagines and Nymphs: 86, 87, 310, 312;
Judson & Nelson 2012
. Zootaxa, 3541: 28;
Li
et al.
2015
. Illiesia, 11(3): 25.
Material examined.
32♂
, 20♀ (
HIST
):
CHINA
: Inner
Mongolia
Autonomous Region, Mt. Aershan (Arxan), Budong River, leg. Li Shi, Mingrun Tian, Yuxuan Zhu and Xuefeng Gao;
3♂
, 1♀, 75 nymphs (
HIST
):
CHINA
: Inner
Mongolia
Autonomous Region, Mt. Aershan (Arxan), Bailangtaoer River,
1192 m
,
25.vii.2014
, leg. Li Shi, Mingrun Tian, Yuxuan Zhu and Xuefeng Gao;
32♂
, 20♀ (
HIST
):
CHINA
: Inner
Mongolia
Autonomous Region, Mt. Aershan (Arxan), upstream of Halaha River,
1050 m
,
25.vii.2014
, leg. Li Shi, Mingrun Tian, Yuxuan Zhu and Xuefeng Gao.
Remarks.
Recently redescribed by
Li
et al.
(2015)
based on fresh material from Inner
Mongolia
Autonomous Region, this species is well-known in both adult and larval stages.
Alexander & Stewart (1999)
mentioned that the epiproct is completely covered with posteriorly directed hairs. In our Chinese, and comparative Russian material, the epiproct has only a marginal hair fringe (compare fig. 21A in
Alexander & Stewart 1999
to figs.
1, 3 in
Li et al 2015
and figs.
533–534 in
Teslenko & Zhiltzova 2009
).