Identification and character analysis of the Acerentomidae (Protura) of the northeastern Palearctic (Protura: Acerentomidae)
Author
Shrubovych, Julia
text
Zootaxa
2014
3755
2
136
164
journal article
46612
10.11646/zootaxa.3755.2.2
acfc0c4f-a91d-4244-b034-3314528fb476
1175-5326
228438
2BA7877A-8CDF-4658-A789-F18EE565422B
Subfamily
Nipponentominae Yin, 1983
This subfamily includes 13 genera (
Szeptycki 2007
;
Bu & Yin 2007
;
Shrubovych
et al.
2014
), eight of which occur in the northeastern Palearctic.
Verrucoentomon
Rusek, 1974
contains 13 species (Shrubovych & Bernard 2012). Nine species are distributed in the eastern Palearctic: Russian Asia,
Japan
,
China
and
Korea
. Only one species,
V. rafalskii
Szeptycki, 1997
, has been reported in Central Europe (Carpathians), and 3 species are known in North
America
(northern
Canada
, Alaska) (
Fig. 7
). Two species,
V. aurifer
and
V. joannis
,
are distributed in southern Siberia (
Szeptycki 1988
), and
V. anatoli
is widespread in northern and eastern Siberia (Shrubovych & Bernard 2012). Three species,
V. louisanne
,
V. kawakatsui
and
V. shirampa
, have been recorded from the Russian Far East (
Nakamura 2004
; Shrubovych & Bernard 2012).
Callientomon
Yin, 1980
possesses only one species,
C. chinensis
, which is distributed in northern
China
(
Yin 1980
,
1999
). I have seen two female specimens from the Russian Far East (collected in the Skotovsky and Khasansky areas of Primorskyi Kray).
Nienna
Szeptycki, 1988
includes two species, both distributed in the Asian Palearctic. The
type
species,
N. parvula
, is recorded from the southern part of Siberia (
Szeptycki 1988
) and is known only from the
type
locality. The other species,
N. quinghaiensis
Bu & Yin, 2008
, occurs in Inner
Mongolia
(
Bu & Yin 2008
; Bu
et al.
2011).
Noldo
Szeptycki, 1988
comprises two species.
Noldo submontanus
Szeptycki, 1988
is found in southern Siberia.
Noldo kaprusii
Shrubovych & Szeptycki, 2006
, is described from the Crimea Mountains in
Ukraine
(
Shrubovych & Szeptycki 2006
). Several undescribed species of
Noldo
occur in the Caucasus Mountains (unpublished).
Yavanna
Szeptycki, 1988
contains 7 species, occurring in northeastern Asia and North
America
(Shrubovych
et al
. 2012). Five species (
Y. altaica
,
Y. baikalica
,
Y. chimitovae
,
Y. stebaevae
and
Y. babenkoi
) are known from Siberia, one species from
China
and one from Alaska. All the Siberian species are distributed in southern Siberia with the exception of
Y. babenkoi
,
which is found in northern Siberia (Shrubovych
et al.
2012).
FIGURES 2–4.
Known distribution of proturan genera. 2)
Baculentulus
Tuxen, 1977
. 3)
Tuxenentulus
Imadaté, 1973
. 4)
Sugaentulus
Imadaté, 1978
.
FIGURES 5–7.
Known distribution of proturan genera. 5)
Filientomon
Rusek, 1974
. 6)
Yamatentomon
Imadaté, 1964
. 7)
Verrucoentomon
Rusek, 1974
.
FIGURE 8-10.
Known distribution of proturan genera. 8)
Yavanna
Szeptycki, 1988
. 9)
Nipponentomon
Imadaté & Yosii, 1959
. 10)
Imadateiella
Rusek, 1974
.
Nipponentomon
Imadaté & Yosii, 1959
contains 16 species: 9 from the eastern Palearctic (Russian Far East, Northeast
China
,
Japan
and
Korea
) and 7 from North
America
(
USA
,
Canada
) (
Szeptycki 2007
;
Bernard & Biechele 2008
;
Shrubovych 2009a
;
Bu
et al.
2013
) (
Fig. 9
). Five species have been recorded from eastern
Russia
. The majority (4 species) are distributed in the Russian Far East:
N. bidentatum
and
N. khabarovskense
were recorded from Khabarovskyi Kray (
Nakamura 2004
), while
N. nippon
and
N. jaceki
are numerous and widely distributed in the Primorskyi and Ussurijskyi districts (
Shrubovych 2009a
). These species occur in Khabarovskyi Kray as well (
1 female
of
N. nippon
,
1 preimago of
N. jaceki
,
Russia
, Khabarovskyi Kray, upper floor of Ko River, soil in mixed wood with cedar, hazel and maple,
02.VIII.2011
, coll. N. Rjabinin). Only one Siberian species,
N. taiga
, has been collected; this species is known from both the northern and the southern parts of Siberia (
Bu
et al.
2013
).
Imadateiella
Rusek, 1974
comprises 7 species and one subspecies, all distributed in the eastern Palearctic:
Japan
,
Korea
,
China
, the Russian Far East and Siberia (
Szeptycki 1988
;
Szeptycki 2007
) (
Fig. 10
). Two species have been identified from Russian Asia:
I. murka
from Eastern Siberia (
Szeptycki 1988
) and
I. sharovi
from the Magadan district in the Russian Far East. Some specimens of this genus have been collected from northern Siberia (
Fig. 1
, Site 1).