Hydropsyche maroccana Navás 1932

Bemmoussat-Dekkak, Soumya, Abdellaoui-Hassaine, Karima, Sartori, Michel, Morse, John C. & Zamora-Muñoz, Carmen, 2021, Larval Taxonomy and Distribution of Genus Hydropsyche (Trichoptera: Hydropsychidae) in Northwestern Algeria, Zootaxa 4915 (4), pp. 481-505 : 491-494

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4915.4.2

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:84122919-0AE3-43BB-AECB-6F3CA0D63629

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4461551

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/039AD565-2D06-FFFB-FF1C-FBA2FD41FDB3

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Hydropsyche maroccana Navás 1932
status

 

Hydropsyche maroccana Navás 1932 View in CoL

( Figs 8 View FIGURE 8 , 9 View FIGURE 9 )

Material examined: Adult males were obtained from reared mature pupae: Chouly Wadi at Ouled Mimoun ( CH 4): 1 ( UTA) , 12.iv.2014; Tafna Wadi ( TFF) : 5 ( UTA) , 25.v.2015 and 3 ( UTA) , 17.iii.2017; Khemis Wadi (KH1): 1 ( UTA) , 16.v.2015; and from the same wadi ( TAF) : 2 ( UTA), 24.vii.2017 .

Hydropsyche maroccana morphotype 1 larvae: Chouly Wadi ( CH 4): 30 ( UTA, UGS), 20.iv.2014 , 45 ( UTA), 13.viii.2014 and 15 ( UTA), 12.iv.2015 ; Tafna Wadi ( TGB): 58 ( UTA), 17.iii.2017 ; Tafna Wadi ( TFF): 87 ( UTA), 1.viii.2014 , 75, 08.viii.2015, 135 ( UTA), 11.iii.2015 , 14 ( UTA), 17.iii.2016 , 90 ( UTA), 17.iv.2017 ; Isser Wadi ( IOM): 33 ( UTA), 12.iv.2015 ; Chouly Wadi ( CH 4): 33 ( UTA), 12.iv.2014 , 75 ( UTA), 16.v.2016 ; Khemis Wadi (KH1): 25 ( UTA), 20.iv.2014 ; Djamaa Sakhra (DS1): 2 ( UTA), 23.iii.2019 and 7 ( UTA), 06.iv.2019 ; Djamaa Sakhra (DS2): 15 ( UTA), 23.iii.2019 and 33 ( UTA), 06.iv.2019 ; Coastal Wadi ( TAF): 75 ( UTA), 21.iv.2019 and 45 ( UTA), 04.vii.2015 .

Hydropsyche maroccana morphotype 2 larvae: Tafna Wadi ( TFF): 156 (UTA), 17.iv.2014 and 58 (UTA, UGS), 17.iv.2017 .

Description: Two larval morphotypes were collected. They differ in their colors and the aboral spot. H. maroccana 1 morphotype is similar to larva described by Dakki (1978) and Allaya (2003). The body length of the larva of the fifth instar of both morphotypes ranging from 22 to 25 mm. H. maroccana morphotype 1 has light brown body color with dark pronotum and head ( Fig. 8A View FIGURE 8 ), unlike H. maroccana morphotype 2, whose yellowish-colored head tends to be very light in appearance ( Fig. 9A View FIGURE 9 ). Both morphotypes having a convex anterior edge of the apotome ( Figs 8B View FIGURE 8 , 9B View FIGURE 9 ), a submentum with long and narrow lateral lobes ( Figs 8C View FIGURE 8 , 9C View FIGURE 9 ) and posterior prosternites pigmented ( Figs 8D View FIGURE 8 , 9D View FIGURE 9 ; Table 2). Morphotype 1 with light oral spot and blurred aboral spot, morphotype 2 with all light spots of frontoclypeal apotome completely joined, with dark T shape in centre and aboral spot V-shaped ( Fig. 9B View FIGURE 9 ; Table 2). Pigmented zone covering posterior part of cephalic capsule with granular appearance for both morphotypes ( Figs 8B View FIGURE 8 , 9B View FIGURE 9 ).

Distribution and ecology: This West Palearctic species has been previously recorded in Algeria by Arab (1989) and Arab et al. (2004); in Tunisia by Boumaiza (1994), Allaya (2003), Kumanski (2007), and Bennas et al. (2018); in Morocco by Dakki (1978) as H. timha Mosely 1938 , and by Dakki & Tachet (1987) and in the Canary Islands as H. flava Nybom 1948 ( Báez & Oromí 2010; Morse 2020).

This species seems to thrive in a wide range of ecological conditions since it was collected in all the sampling sites at altitudes ranging from 3 to 1022 m a.s.l., although at a low abundance at high altitude. The abundance of this species increases considerably as the streams’ dimensions increase with decreasing altitude. This phenomenon was observed especially downstream of wastewater discharge; when the concentration of organic matter was very high, the species became very abundant, inhabiting various types of substrates as blocks, heterometric pebbles, and coarse and fine gravel. Some juvenile larvae were found attached to aquatic parts of riparian vegetation. Euryoecious and potamic preferences characterize this species.

UTA

University of Texas at Arlington

IOM

Institute of Oceanology, Academy of Sciences

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF