Lispe odessae Becker, 1904
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.33910/2686-9519-2020-12-2-158-188 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:8F60709F-933E-4219-BB23-C13FF4CADAB9 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A0FC6C-1F55-FFEE-DCD6-91F3FE7CA87E |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Lispe odessae Becker, 1904 |
status |
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Lispe odessae Becker, 1904 View in CoL
Fig. 50 View Figs 47–50
Lispe odessae Becker, 1904 View in CoL ( Hennig 1960) Lispe caesia Meigen, 1826 View in CoL : misidentification by Canzoneri & Meneghini ( Vikhrev et al. 2016) Lispe caesia Meigen, 1826 View in CoL ( Pont 1986)
Lispe caesia microchaeta Séguy, 1940 View in CoL ( Zhang et al. 2016)
Lispe odessae Becker, 1904 ( Vikhrev et al. 2016)
Material examined: see Vikhrev et al. (2016). New record: RUSSIA, Tuva reg., Dus-Khol salt L., 700 m asl, 51.36°N 94.45°E, 2–5 July 2017, N. Vikhrev, 3♂ ( ZMUM) GoogleMaps .
Distribution. Palaearctic, from E Europe to Asian Far East: China: Liaoning and Xinjiang prov.; Kazakhstan: Kyzylorda and W. Kazakhstan reg.; Mongolia, Omnogovi prov.; Russia: Astrakhan, Kalmykia, Orenburg, Tuva and Volgograd reg.; Turkmenistan, Mary reg.; Ukraine, Odessa reg. Inland salt basins and estuaries at sea shores.
Lispe orientalis Wiedemann, 1824 Lispe orientalis Wiedemann, 1824 ( Hennig 1960; Vikhrev 2014)
Material examined: see Vikhrev (2011; 2014).
Distribution. In Palaearctic known from: Egypt (Sinai), Israel, Turkey, Russia (Krasnodar and Primorsky reg.), Iran, Azerbaijan, Pakistan, Tajikistan, Korea, widespread in China. Widespread in highland localities in the Oriental region. L. orientalis prefers dirty, organically polluted water.
ZMUM |
Zoological Museum, University of Amoy |
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