Hydrobiosella bispina Kimmins

Cartwright, David I., 2010, Studies of Australian Hydrobiosella Tillyard: a review of the Australian species of the Hydrobiosella bispina Kimmins group (Trichoptera: Philopotamidae), Memoirs of Museum Victoria 67, pp. 1-13 : 7-9

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.24199/j.mmv.2010.67.01

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8070782

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/704FCC34-FFD5-E60A-BD07-F9F18BA7ABD3

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Hydrobiosella bispina Kimmins
status

 

Hydrobiosella bispina Kimmins View in CoL View at ENA

Figures 20–22 View Figures 17–25 , 42–43 View Figures 35–49

Hydrobiosella bispina Kimmins in Mosely and Kimmins, 1953:

394, fig. 270.— Neboiss, 1986: 102.

Type material (not seen). Holotype. Male, New South Wales, Stanwell Park , 23 Apr 1916, R. J. Tillyard ( BMNH).

Paratype (not seen). New South Wales. 1 male, collected with holotype ( BMNH) .

Material examined. New South Wales. 3 males, 6 females, Wilson R ., Wilson R . Reserve , 11 Feb 2008, R . St Clair; 1 male, Wilson R ., Bobs Ridge Rd , 31°15'S, 152°31'E, 4 Dec 2007, A. Glaister, J. Dean and R. St Clair GoogleMaps ; 1 male (specimen PT-579 figured), Tubrabucca, Barrington Tops , 15 Nov 1953, A. Neboiss ( NMV) ; 2 males, 16 females, Dilgry R ., Banksia camp ground, 31°53'S, 151°32'E, 2 Dec 2007, A. Glaister, J. Dean and R GoogleMaps . St Clair; 3 males, 4 females, Gloucester R ., Gloucester R . camping area, 32°03'S, 151°41'E, 1 Dec 2007, A. Glaister, J. Dean and R GoogleMaps . St Clair; 1 male, 1 female (specimen CT-605 figured), Gloucester Tops, el. 1280 m, Malaise , 19 Nov to 4 Dec 1988, D. Bickle ; 3 males, 1 female, Gloucester Tops , 32°04'S, 151°34'E, el. 1300 m, 2–3 Dec 1988, Theischinger and Mueller GoogleMaps ; 1 male, 1 female, Jerusalem Falls near Karuah , 6 Dec 1988, G. Theischinger ; 1 male, 1 female, Wilson R . near Bellangry , 5 Dec 1988, G. Theischinger ; 1 male, Wollomi Brook, The Basin, Olney State Forest , 33°06'S, 151°14'E, 26 Nov 2007, A. Glaister, J. Dean and R GoogleMaps . St Clair ( NMV) .

Diagnosis. Hydrobiosella bispina can be separated from other species in the group by the very long parameres, which reach the tip of the inferior appendages.

Description. (Revised after Kimmins in Mosely and Kimmins, 1953.) Wings similar to those of H.arcuata (fig. 1), length of forewing: male 6.3–8.3 mm, female 7.2–8.6 mm. Forewing fork 2 long, length fork 2 about 1.5 times length of fork 1; length fork 3 about twice length footstalk; fork 4 length about 8 times length footstalk. Hind wing fork 1 sessile; fork 3 length about 1.5 times length of footstalk.

Male. Segment IX with small, shallow notch medially on distal margin (fig. 22). Segment X with a slender mesal lobe, with a pair of short hairs/bristles subapically, in lateral view slightly downturned distally (fig. 21); in dorsal view slightly narrowed subapically (fig. 20); with a pair of pigmented lateral lobes, which end in small, slightly downward and outward projecting rounded hooks (figs 20–21). Phallus generally slender, slightly dilated subapically; with a pair of very slender and elongate parameres arising from the phallus near the apex (fig. 21). Inferior appendages in lateral view, with basal segment length about twice maximum width, broadest near middle, tapered strongly distally; harpago more slender, with ventral margin sharply angled at about 90 degrees near middle, tapered slightly distally (fig. 21).

Female. Genitalia typical of genus, with a small, shallow, triangular projection on sternite VIII mesodistally (figs 42–43).

Remarks. Males and females of Hydrobiosella bispina have been collected from nine sites in addition to the type locality, all in eastern New South Wales (latitudinal range 31°15'– 33°06'S).

Kimmins’ (in Mosely and Kimmins 1953) and Neboiss’ (1986) figures have been redrawn to allow direct comparisons and to accompany the description that is revised in light of new interpretations of Hydrobiosella genitalic structures.

R

Departamento de Geologia, Universidad de Chile

NMV

Museum Victoria

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