Sphaeronemoura poda Sivec & Stark, 2010
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5447.3.6 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:129EA7DA-05D0-4382-B8BA-1027AF2DA044 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11164296 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03BE87E9-FFBA-FF85-FF01-E4FCFBB6F898 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
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Sphaeronemoura poda Sivec & Stark, 2010 |
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Sphaeronemoura poda Sivec & Stark, 2010 View in CoL (New record for China)
Figs. 12–21 View FIGURES 12 View FIGURES 13–21
Sphaeronemoura poda Sivec & Stark, 2010 View in CoL . Denisia 29:371.
Type locality. Thailand, Phitsanulok Province, Phu Hin Rong Kla National Park .
Material examined. 1 male, 1 female: CHINA, Yunnan, Dali, Binchuan County, Lawu Village , N 25.822728°, E 100.807883°, 1430 m, 29.XI.2018, leg. Xu-Bo Wang ( SWFU) GoogleMaps . 1 male, 1 female: CHINA, Yunnan, Dehong, Yingjiang County, Nabang Town , N 24°37′14.48″, E 97°38′19.09″, 1351 m, 10.Ⅰ.2019, leg. Yu-Han Qian, Jin-Hong Xiang ( SWFU) GoogleMaps .
Adult habitus ( Figs. 12 View FIGURES 12 ). Head black and smooth, compound eyes black and protruded; antenna slender and dark with hair. Pronotum dark brown, trapezoid, wider than longer, rugosities scattered. Wings macropterous, light brown, veins dark brown, margins of wings fringed with short bristles. Legs dark brown.
Female ( Figs. 20–21 View FIGURES 13–21 ). Forewing length 10.2–11.0 mm, hindwing length 8.5–9.0 mm (n=2). Body coloration and the cervical gills are similar to the male. Pregenital plate on sternum VII, nearly semicircular and brown, posterior margin concave slightly and medial field membranous. Subgenital plate brown, forming two small transverse sclerites; the sclerotized portions of the vaginal lobes rectangular, posterior margin with some short transverse stripes. Sternite IX brown, with a little membranous indentation on the middle of the anterior margin.
Distribution. China (Yunnan); Thailand.
Remarks. The two males collected in Yunnan Province ( Figs. 13–19 View FIGURES 13–21 ) agreed well with the holotype illustrations from Thailand (figs. 5–7 in Sivec & Stark, 2010). Strong similarities were found on tergum X, the lobes of the paraprocts, and the strongly curved epiproct flagellum. The apex of flagellum is somewhat foot-shaped in the Thailand type and Dehong of Yunnan specimen ( Figs. 17–19 View FIGURES 13–21 ), but the Dali specimen shows some minor variation ( Figs. 14–16 View FIGURES 13–21 ). The Thailand type locality is in the Lancang (Mekong) River system, while the Dehong specimen comes from the Dulong (Irrawaddy) River system. Both rivers originate in the Tibetan Plateau and have many tributaries flowing south into the Indochina Peninsula. Alternatively, the Dali specimen comes from the south bank of the hot, dry valley of the Jinsha River. The watershed of this river is not developed. The slight variation of the epiproct flagellum may be the result of geographical isolation from other variants.
The biodiversity and endemism of stoneflies is high in the southwestern mountainous regions of China. The discovery of S. poda in Yunnan has extended its range northward by 1000 km. Across these three locations S. poda occupies elevations from 1200–1500 m asl. Several other species known from the three parallel rivers region in northwest Yunnan probably exist further south in the highest elevations of Thailand.
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Sphaeronemoura poda Sivec & Stark, 2010
Qian, Yu-Han, Xiang, Jin-Hong & Bai, Xue 2024 |
Sphaeronemoura poda
Sivec & Stark 2010 |