Phalacrocera replicata, (LINNAEUS, 1758)

Imada, Yume, 2021, Moss mimesis par excellence: integrating previous and new data on the life history and larval ecomorphology of long-bodied craneflies (Diptera: Cylindrotomidae: Cylindrotominae), Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 193, pp. 1156-1204 : 1187-1189

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1093/zoolinnean/zlaa177

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5752947

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/156C6A30-1F33-A454-FF31-895EFDAC5171

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Phalacrocera replicata
status

 

PHALACROCERA REPLICATA (LINNAEUS, 1758) View in CoL

( FIGS 5J View Figure 5 , 10D View Figure 10 , 18A, B View Figure 18 )

Life history: Larvae were found to live in stagnant, dystrophic waters or acid pools of moors or woodlands where aquatic mosses, such as Hypnum , Fontinalis and Sphagnum , were abundant ( Bengtsson, 1897; Brindle, 1967; Brinkmann, 1997; Stubbs, 2010). Phalacrocera replicata had a single brood in a year ( Bengtsson, 1897; Müggenburg, 1901; Alexander, 1920); admittedly, they might have a second brood ( Miall & Shelford, 1897). Bengtsson (1897) confirmed that P. replicata moult at least eight and possibly ten times during their development. The first moult occurred 4–6 days after leaving the eggs ( Bengtsson, 1897), which did not significantly affect the external or internal appearance. The second moult occurred at about 18–20 days, and the larvae dramatically changed in appearance ( Bengtsson, 1897). First-instar larvae started feeding on the host-plants immediately after hatching; they scraped only the upper layer of leaves ( Peus, 1952). They overwintered as larvae and thus endured long and severe cold under the ice ( De Geer, 1773; Miall & Shelford, 1897; Wesenberg- Lund, 1915). The larvae were also able to live a long period of time (c. 5 days) in anoxic conditions ( Miall & Shelford, 1897) and they could sit down deep in water 1 m in depth for a while in autumn ( Wesenberg-Lund, 1915). Pupae were much more active than larvae and when disturbed, wriggled about and bent their bodies almost into a circle by flexion of the abdomen ( Miall & Shelford, 1897). Usually, the pupae rested vertically, with the mesothoracic horns reaching the surface of the water ( Miall & Shelford, 1897; Hemmingsen, 1952; Peus, 1952), by firmly grasping floating plants with its dorsal abdominal hooks ( Miall & Shelford, 1897). Although the pupae could survive asphyxiation for six hours ( Miall & Shelford, 1897), they occasionally floated at the water surface through weeds by abdominal movement, and then recovered their original position for respiration ( Miall & Shelford, 1897).

Oviposition behaviour: Larvae were found in ponds in which moss vegetation flourishes and currents keep the water in a constant motion ( Hemmingsen, 1952). Females walked on the water surface with the posterior end of the abdomen pricking into the water or into submerged moss ( Hemmingsen, 1952). Female adults deposited the eggs in the leaf axils of submerged moss, usually singly ( Miall & Shelford, 1897), or four to six egg batchs in each pocket of concave leaves of Fontinalis moss ( Wesenberg-Lund, 1943); the number of eggs laid in each leaf seemed to depend on the leaf size ( Hemmingsen, 1952). Females laid c. 60 eggs in total ( Miall & Shelford, 1897).

Egg: Spindle-shaped. Eggs of Phalacrocera appearently darkest among all genera ( Peus, 1952). Chorionic surface finely granulated, with numerous small pits ( Peus, 1952). Adhesive material delivered by the heads of club-shaped structures, and their necks stretched into apparent fibres when eggs are detached ( Hemmingsen, 1952).

Final-instar larva: Length 25 mm ( Brindle, 1967; Alexander, 1920). Body colour on dorsal side dark brown or lighter, showing dimorphism among individuals at final instar ( Wesenberg-Lund, 1915; Brinkmann, 1997; Pujante et al., 2016); dorsally with pale, indistinct stripes ( Miall & Shelford, 1897), and ventrally whitish. Body with extremely long cuticular lobes ( Fig. 16A View Figure 16 ). Prothorax with each one pair of dorsal and lateral lobes; ventral lobe absent. Meso- and metathorax with dorsal and lateral lobes, filiform and long, two and one pair(s), respectively; one pair of ventral lobes, small and conical. Dorsal lobes on abdominal segments filiform and long, with length exceeding length of segment; segments I–VII with two pairs of lobes, anterior pair simple and posterior pair deeply bifurcated ( Fig. 5H View Figure 5 ). Lateral lobes on abdominal segments simple without bifurcation, filiform and long; abdominal segment I with two pairs; abdominal segments II–VII with three pairs, anteriormost and posteriormost pairs shorter than middle pair, with longest pair approximate dorsal lobes in length. Ventral lobes on abdominal segments simple; segments I, II and III–VII with two, three, four pairs of lobes, respectively, posteriormost pair longest; additionally, on segments I–VII, single papilla-like lobe present near posterior end of segment. Anal segment with three pairs of lobes in total ( Fig. 16B View Figure 16 ): one pair of dorsal lobes (dl), filiform and simple, bearing a short, sclerotized accessory lobe (dac) at the base with dark pigmentation; lateral lobe absent; one pair of ventral lobes (vl), blackened distally. Anal papillae soft and filiform, as single papilla (anp) on each side of the anus ( Fig. 8D View Figure 8 ). Spiracular field without hair fringe ( Fig. 10D View Figure 10 ). Elongated cuticular lobes internally containing tracheal branches ( Bengtsson, 1897; Peus, 1952).

Host-plants: This species feeds on submerged or aquatic mosses, including Sphagnum sp. ( Sphagnales : Sphagnaceae ) ( Clymo & Hayward, 1982), Amblystegium exanulatum De.Not. , A. fluitans Hedw. ( Hypnales : Amblystegiaceae ), Warnstorfia exannulata (Schimp.) Loeske ( Hypnales : Calliergonaceae ), Hypnum elodes F.Weber & D.Mohr (unsolved name) ( Hypnales : Hypnaceae ), Fontinalis antipyretica and F. dalecarlica Schimp. var. microphylla (Schimp.) Limpr. ( Hypnales : Fontinalaceae ) ( Miall & Shelford, 1897; Hemmingsen, 1952; Brinkmann, 1997). Miall & Shelford (1897) and Osten Sacken (1897) cited Engel (1884) and Giard (1895), who reported that the larvae not only eat some mosses (e.g. A. exanulatum ), but also aquatic angiosperms like Ranunculus fluitans Lam. ( Ranunculales : Ranunculaceae ), but this was not confirmed by later authors.

Larval behaviour: Larvae cling to moss stems using their large anal hooks to secure the body and sway it from side to side, as if to promote respiration ( Miall & Shelford, 1897). They creep from stem to stem by grasping with the mandibles and the anal hook alternately; when alarmed, they curl up like a caterpillar ( Miall & Shelford, 1897).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Cylindrotomidae

SubFamily

Cylindrotominae

Genus

Phalacrocera

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