Isonychia sexpetala Tiunova et al., 2004

Qiang, Xin-He & Zhou, Chang-Fa, 2023, A preliminary review of Isonychia Eaton, 1871 from Chinese mainland with a re-description of I. kiangsinensis Hsu, 1936 (Insecta, Ephemeroptera, Isonychiidae), ZooKeys 1178, pp. 115-141 : 115

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1178.104619

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:D2371186-B406-4F65-9AA5-EB961F9D7D0C

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E0B5C9A1-98D3-588B-83E2-6CC922469BC5

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Isonychia sexpetala Tiunova et al., 2004
status

 

Isonychia sexpetala Tiunova et al., 2004 View in CoL

Isonychia (Isonychia) sexpetala Tiunova et al., 2004: 10 (nymph and adults). Types from Russia and China; Zhou 2013: 196; Zhou et al. 2015: 245.

Material examined.

1 male imago, Nenjiang , Liuyuan, Qiqihar City, Heilongjiang Province, China, 1-VIII-2007, collected by Shilei Wang, Changfa Zhou.

Diagnosis.

The male of this species is smaller than most congeners but similar to I. ussurica . It has no pigments on wings, MP of hindwings forked more apically than MA, but two forking points are close (Fig. 12A, B View Figure 12 ), segment II of forceps with straight inner margin, penes nearly cylindrical with convex distal margins and membranous processes with pigmented or sclerotized tip (Fig. 12C-E View Figure 12 ).

The males of I. ivani Tiunova et Gorovaya, 2010 and I. sexpetala Tiunova et al., 2004 are alike because they have similar cylindrical penes (Fig. 12D View Figure 12 ) and the basal 1/2 of their foretarsi is usually pale (Fig. 1D View Figure 1 ), but their membranous processes beneath penes are different. The processes of I. sexpetala have a rounded apex (Fig. 12E View Figure 12 ) while those of I. ivani are tapered. The nymphs of these two species can be separated by their color pattern of abdominal terga and gills: (1) the pale median longitudinal line of I. sexpetala is shorter than that of I. ivani ( Tiunova et al. 2004; Tiunova and Gorovaya 2010), (2) gills of I. ivani have apical small dark dots while those of I. sexpetala are transparent.

Description.

See Tiunova et al. (2004).

Distribution.

China (Heilongjiang province); Russia ( Tiunova et al. 2004).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Ephemeroptera

Family

Isonychiidae

Genus

Isonychia