A contribution to the Heptageniidae (Insecta, Ephemeroptera) of Thailand and Malaysia
Author
Braasch, Dietrich
Author
Boonsoong, Boonsatien
text
Zootaxa
2010
2610
1
26
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.197793
8f84f706-94cc-43a5-9027-efd2138aa784
1175-5326
197793
Rhithrogeniella ornata
Ulmer, 1939
Material examined.
5 SI males,
Malaysia
, Gombak River, Research-Station Senckenbergmuseum Frankfurt am Main, 16.–
20.08.2007
, leg. D. Kovac, det. Braasch.
Diagnosis.
The longer male subimagos of
Rhithrogeniella ornata
(5.5-7.0 mm) can be separated from
R. tonkinensis
Soldán & Braasch, 1986
by: a pair of brown paramedian bands, and median streak cleft on terga II–VIII (
Ulmer 1939: p. 577, Fig. 170
), posterior margins of terga with broad darker rim, contiguous to the bands; figure mark on tergum VIII residuary, consisting merely of two median streaks of half tergum length and a cross-streak medio-distally; and terga IX–X light. In contrast to
R. ornata
from Java and Sumatra (
Ulmer 1939
), the median streak in the specimens from
Malaysia
is only faintly cleft and their pattern of tergum V is somewhat blurred or extinguished. The apices of penis are bluntly pointed, and the medial portion of posterior margin of subgenital plate is slightly concave.
Ulmer (1939)
illustrated the male (p. 577, Fig. 165–168) and described the female (text only) of
R. ornata
; the larva of this species remains unknown.
In the smaller male subimagos of
R. tonkinensis
(
4.1–4.7 mm
) throu-going paramedian bands on terga II– VI, on V and VI shortened, median streaks on terga lacking, terga VII–X are light; apices of penis lobes broadly rounded; posterior margin of subgenital plate straight (Soldán & Braasch 1986: p.209, Fig. 19–20). Larvae, and larvae and imagos of
R. tonkinensis
are respectively figured in Soldán & Braasch (1986: p. 205, Figs. 1–8, p. 207, Figs. 9–12) and
Braasch (1990: p.11, fig. 17.1–4)
.
Discussion.
The new findings in
Malaysia
only presented subimago males. Therefore comparison was made along corresponding figures in Soldán and Braasch (1986) and
Ulmer (1939)
. Now,
Rhithrogeniella ornata
is known from Java, Sumatra and continental West-Malaysia, whereas
R. tonkinensis
is found in
China
,
Thailand
and
Vietnam
(
Braasch 1990
,
Ulmer 1939
, You
et al.
1983). We have already previously pointed out (
Braasch & Boonsoong 2009
) that
R. tonkinensis
is probably identical with ‘
Afronurus’ sangangensis
(
You
et al.
1982
: p. 62, Figs. 1–13), but we had no opportunity to confirm this by comparing Chinese material.