Studies of Australian Hydrobiosella Tillyard: a review of the Australian species of the Hydrobiosella bispina Kimmins group (Trichoptera: Philopotamidae)
Author
Cartwright, David I.
text
Memoirs of Museum Victoria
2010
2010-12-31
67
1
13
https://museumsvictoria.com.au/collections-research/journals/memoirs-of-museum-victoria/volume-67-2010/pages-1-13/
journal article
10.24199/j.mmv.2010.67.01
1447-2554
8065066
Hydrobiosella thurawal
sp. nov.
Figures 32–34
,
48–49
Holotype
.
Male
,
New South Wales
,
Minnamurra Falls
(about
34°38'S
,
150°44'E
),?
12 Aug 1967
,
N. Hynes
and joint collector unknown (
NMV
, T-20945).
Paratype
.
New South Wales
.
1 male
(specimen PT-580 figured)
,
1 female
(specimen CT-604 figured),
Minnamurra Falls
,
W of Kiama
,
25 Mar 1973
,
A. Neboiss
(
NMV
)
.
Diagnosis
.
Hydrobiosella thurawal
can be separated from other species in the group by small differences in segment X and the inferior appendages; segment X in lateral view, with apex not bulbous, curved slightly downwards; lateral lobes with apical hooks directed downwards and not outwards; inferior appendages with basal segment tapered strongly distally; harpago with ventral margin sharply angled at about 90 degrees, not dilated in distal half.
Description
. Wings similar to those of
H.arcuata
(
Fig. 1
), length of forewing: male
6.9–8.5 mm
, female
8.7 mm
. Forewing fork 2 long, length fork 2 about 1.6 times length of fork 1; length fork 3 about twice length footstalk; fork 4 length about 5.8 times length footstalk. Hind wing fork 1 with very short footstalk; fork 3 length about 2.4 times length of footstalk.
Male
. Segment IX with small, shallow notch medially on distal margin (fig. 34). Segment X mesal lobe, with a pair of short hairs/bristles subapically, in lateral view slightly downturned distally (fig. 33); in dorsal view, narrowed subapically, very slightly bulbous apically (fig. 32), with a pair of pigmented lateral lobes, which terminate in small, downward projecting hooks (figs 32–33). Inferior appendages in lateral view, with basal segment length about 1.8 times maximum width, broadest near middle, tapered distally, harpago more slender, ventral margin sharply angled at about 90 degrees near middle (fig. 33).
Female
. Genitalia typical of genus, with a small, shallow projection on sternite VIII mesodistally (figs 48–49).
Figures 35–49.
Hydrobiosella
spp.
; 35–37,
Hydrobiosella yokunna
sp. nov.
male genitalia in dorsal, lateral and part ventral views; 35, dorsal; 36, lateral; 37, ventral, mesodistal margin of segment IX; 38–49,
Hydrobiosella
spp.
female genitalia (part segment VIII) in lateral and (segment VIII) ventral view; 38–39,
Hydrobiosella unispina
sp. nov.
; 38, lateral; 39, ventral; 40–41,
Hydrobiosella mundagurra
sp. nov.
; 40, lateral; 41, female genitalia, ventral; 42–43,
Hydrobiosella bispina
Kimmins
; 42, lateral; 43, ventral; 44–45,
Hydrobiosella arcuata
Kimmins
; 44, lateral; 45, ventral; 46–47,
Hydrobiosella woonoongoora
sp. nov.
; 46, lateral; 47, ventral; 48–49,
Hydrobiosella thurawal
sp. nov.
; 48, lateral; 49, ventral.
Etymology
.
Thurawal
— Australian Aboriginal name for the area around the
type
locality.
Remarks
. Two males and
one female
specimen of
Hydrobiosella thurawal
have been collected from the
type
locality in central-eastern
New South Wales
(latitude
34°38'S
).