Paracloeodes minutus ( Daggy 1945 )

Cruz, Paulo Vilela, Usher, Andrew K. & Jacobus, Luke M., 2017, Review of continental North and Central American Paracloeodes Day 1955 (Ephemeroptera: Baetidae), including description of a new species from Minnesota, U. S. A., Zootaxa 4263 (2), pp. 333-346 : 335-339

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4263.2.7

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:CAAA6867-992E-47B9-B6E7-0E3D8ED50F2C

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6043930

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/872687CF-FFB1-2454-FF09-FACB415C6549

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Paracloeodes minutus ( Daggy 1945 )
status

 

Paracloeodes minutus ( Daggy 1945) View in CoL (comb. by Edmunds et al. 1976)

= Pseudocloeon minutum Daggy, 1945 (orig.)

= Paracloeodes abditus Day, 1955 (syn. by McCafferty & Waltz 1990)

Diagnoses. Male imago. 1) forewing with parallel marginal intercalary veins; 2) hind wing absent ( Fig. 3 View FIGURES 1 – 13 ); 3) posterior margin of styliger plate straight ( Figs. 12 and 13 View FIGURES 1 – 13 ); 4) posterior margin of styliger plate without spine ( Figs. 12 and 13 View FIGURES 1 – 13 ).

Mature nymph. 1) labrum with a pair of subapical setae near middle distinguishable from others dorsal setae; 2) labrum with one row of five simple setae near distolateral margin; 3) distal margin of labrum with bifid setae; 4) distolateral margin of labrum with bifid and strong pectinate setae; 5) right mandible incisors cleft; 6) outer incisor of right mandible without vestigial denticle; 7) maxillary palp 1.60× the length of galea-lacinia; 8) apical half of paraglossa without an abrupt decrease in width ( Figs. 22 and 25 View FIGURES 17 – 25. 17 ); 9) angle between inner margin of labial palp segment III and distal margin of segment II around 90°; 10) lobe of labial palp segment II rounded ( Fig. 19 View FIGURES 17 – 25. 17 ); 11) base of labial palp segment III 0.43 – 0.46× the width of labial palp segment II ( Fig. 19 View FIGURES 17 – 25. 17 ); 12) labial palp with length of segment III 0.80 – 0.85× the width of its base ( Fig. 19 View FIGURES 17 – 25. 17 ); 13) hind wing pads absent; 14) anterior surface of forefemur with one row of blunt setae near dorsal margin ( Fig. 16 View FIGURES 14 – 16 ); 15) medial row of setae on anterior surface of forefemur dense ( Fig. 16 View FIGURES 14 – 16 ); 16) anterior surface of forefemur with dense row of blunt setae near ventral margin ( Fig. 16 View FIGURES 14 – 16 ); 17) tarsal claw 0.5× the length of tarsus, with minute denticles ( Fig. 16 View FIGURES 14 – 16 ); 18) abdominal color pattern as in Figure 4 View FIGURES 1 – 13 ; 19) length of gills 2.0× the subsequent abdominal segment or longer ( Fig. 4 View FIGURES 1 – 13 ).

Distribution. Belize, Costa Rica, Honduras, Nicaragua (Central American countries), Quebec ( Canada), Baja California Sur, San Luis Potosi ( Mexico), Alabama, Arizona, California, Colorado, Georgia, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oregon, South Carolina, South Dakota, Texas, Wisconsin, Wyoming ( U.S.A.) (Daggy 1 945; Day 1955; Sarver & Kondratieff 1997; Randolph & McCafferty 1998; DeWalt et al. 1999; McCafferty & Lenat 2004; Guenther & McCafferty 2005, 2008; McCafferty 2009, 2011; McCafferty et al. 2010, 2012; Klubertanz 2016).

Comments. Edmunds et al. (1976) noted that the type locality of P. abditus “has been dredged, diverted, and dammed and has suffered pollution from irrigation runoff, crop dusting, sewage, and industry.” The type locality of P. minutus ( Figs. 42, 43 View FIGURES 42 – 43 ), on the other hand, remains in good biotic condition, but we did not collect any individuals of P. minutus during our September 2014 and May 2015 visits to the site. Although Daggy (1945) described nymphs for P. minutus from the type locale, these were not associated by rearing. Given that we now know at least two species are present at the type locale, we cannot be sure of a nymph being associated with the type concept of P. minutus . We did, however, confirm the nymph-imago association in P. abditus , and we confirmed that P. minutus and P. abditus male imagos share all diagnostic features.

Paracloeodes minutus View in CoL is listed as a species of Special Concern in Wisconsin, but the small nymphs are good swimmers, probably spending most of their lives in deeper sandy habitat, being most easily collected as later instars ( Lillie 1995; Klubertanz 2016).

We note that we do not know the extent of variation of speckling of the thorax ( Klubertanz 2016: Fig. 98) and pigmentation of intersegmental areas of the abdominal sterna ( Klubertanz 2016: Fig. 20 View FIGURES 17 – 25. 17 b) of nymphs of this species and others; such speckling and pigmentation has been observed to be variable in this species and P. fleeki View in CoL from the U.S. A Southeast (Steven Beaty, Eric Fleek, Victor Holland, pers. comms.), but some western Paracloeodes View in CoL may lack it entirely (Jeff Webb, pers. comm.). Most of our historical specimens are faded, and so we do not provide a detailed evaluation here.

Material examined. One male imago, one set exuviae and one nymph on slide ( P. abditus paratypes), USA, California, Modesto , Toulumne River , 7.vii.1954, W. C. Day col. [ PERC] . One male imago, dried on pin ( P. minutus holotype), USA, Mississippi River, Coon Rapids , Minnesota, 7.vi.1937 [UMN].

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Ephemeroptera

Family

Baetidae

Genus

Paracloeodes

Loc

Paracloeodes minutus ( Daggy 1945 )

Cruz, Paulo Vilela, Usher, Andrew K. & Jacobus, Luke M. 2017
2017
Loc

Paracloeodes abditus

Day 1955
1955
Loc

Pseudocloeon minutum

Daggy 1945
1945
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