Thalerosphyrus determinatus (Walker, 1853)

Sartori, Michel, 2014, The species of Thalerosphyrus Eaton, 1881 (Insecta, Ephemeroptera, Heptageniidae, Ecdyonurinae) in Java and Sumatra, with some comments on the diversity of the genus in the Oriental Realm, ZooKeys 420, pp. 19-39 : 25-27

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.420.7904

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:9B2AB654-B7BD-4831-AD36-E78C981520CE

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/89EF8875-B8F5-733B-34D3-EA290EF60F93

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Thalerosphyrus determinatus (Walker, 1853)
status

 

Taxon classification Animalia Ephemeroptera Heptageniidae

Thalerosphyrus determinatus (Walker, 1853) View in CoL

Thalerosphyrus determinatus Ulmer, 1939, (nymph, pro parte)

Material examined.

2 nymphs, Java, Diengplateau, stream Seraju (D13), ca 1950 m a.s.l., 5.VI.1929, Prof. Thienemann leg. [ZMH]; 1 nymph entirely mounted on microscopic slide, Java, Gedeh Panggerango, Tjisarua, 1050 m, 10.VIII.1930, Dr. Lieftinck leg [ZMH]; 1nymph, Java, Java Barat Province, rocky stream at Cibodas (CL 2186), 1300 m, 3.XI.1985, J.T. & D.A. Polhemus leg [MZL]; 1 nymph, Bali, Baturiti, Desa Antapan, 815 m, 8°19.34'S, 115°11.61'E, 9.X.2009 (BLI005), M. Balke & D. Amran leg [MZL]; 1 nymph, Sumbawa, Nusa Tenggara Barat Province, Madsewu River, 2 km above Badindi, 61 km NW of Bima (CL 2174), 750 m, 20.X.1985, J.T. & D.A. Polhemus leg [MZL].

Eggs extracted from a female imago (caught together with a male imago) and identified by Ulmer as Thalerosphyrus determinatus : West Java, Tjibodas, Tjiwalen Bridge, 1400 m, 4.IX.1932, Dr Lieftinck leg [ZMH].

Description of the nymph.

Body size: up to at least 14.5 mm (not full grown nymph).

Coloration pattern: see Figs 1-2.

Head. Labrum moderately expended laterally, less than 4 times larger than long, with rounded apexes (as in Fig. 16); dorsal surface and anterior margin covered with long and thin setae; ventral surface with a median arch of less than 10 strong and pointed setae. Crown of the galea-lacinia of the maxillae composed of ca. 25 comb-shape setae, the median ones bearing 12-15 teeth. Right mandible with 5-6 bifid and fimbriate setae below the inner incisor and ca. 10 long simple and thin setae below the mola; left mandible with 8-9 simple and fimbriate setae below the inner incisor and ca. 9-10 long simple and thin setae below the mola. Hypopharynx with robust lingua bearing a tuft of small setae, superlinguae densely covered with long and thin setae replaced before the apex by very small setae up to the lower part of the superlinguae (Fig. 27). Labium with glossae rhomboid, slightly concave on their outer margin near apex (Fig. 20), dorsal surface with three stout setae and numerous thin and simple setae.

Thorax. Pronotum weakly expended laterally (Fig. 1). Femora with submarginal rows of pointed bristles on the inner and outer margins, increasing in numbers from the fore to the hind leg. Bristles on the upper face of hind femora arrow-shaped, clearly pointed (Fig. 29). Hind tibia (Fig. 30) without any bristles in outer marginal or submarginal position. Tarsal claw with 2-3 teeth.

Abdomen. Posterolateral expansions not developed on segments I–II, increasing in size from segment III to VII where it may reach the middle of segment VIII, shorter on segment VIII (Fig. 3) and comparable proportionally to those of segments V–VI. Gill I (Fig. 38) with elongated and rounded plate, ca 2.5 × longer than wide; gill IV strongly asymmetrical (Fig. 39), wider than long, gill VI and VII oval and asymmetrical with obtuse apex (Figs 40-41). Posterior margin of tergites with irregular pointed teeth, and numerous microdenticles (Fig. 35). Cerci rather unicolor medium brown, some segments darker in the proximal half.

Description of the eggs.

Size: ca 120 µm × 75 µm; chorion regularly covered by small KCT'S, (1.0-1.5 µm), a little bit larger at poles (Fig. 10), and by microgranules (<0.3 µm); margin of micropyle irregular and formed by microgranules (Fig. 11).

Discussion.

The abdominal pattern of the nymph is the one which is the closest to the one of the male imago redescribed by Ulmer (1924). According to Wang and McCafferty (2004) and our own observations (see below), the illustration of the abdominal patterns of the nymph ( Ulmer 1939, fig. 402) as Thalerosphyrus determinatus does not belong to this species, nor do any of Ulmer's, other drawings.

The species may be easily recognized from its relatives mainly by the weak posterolateral expansions of the abdomen, and the absence of bristles on the outer margin of the hind tibiae.

Thalerosphyrus determinatus as defined here is the less common species found in the investigated area. However it is reported from Bali and Sumbawa for the first time. The species is absent from Sumatra and seems to live in middle to high altitudes, based on the few available data.