Ilybius biguttulus Germar
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1649/0010-065x(2000)054[0036:darolo]2.0.co;2 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4900145 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C087C3-D858-933E-FD90-FE2CFC41FDC9 |
treatment provided by |
Carolina |
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Ilybius biguttulus Germar |
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Ilybius biguttulus Germar View in CoL
Instar I. Colour. Head dorsally with a pattern of lightbrown and paleyellow areas; head appendages grey to brown. Thorax and abdomen grey. Legs, urogomphi and ventral body surface pale brown. Head ( Fig. 1A View Fig ). HL 5 1.07 mm, HW 5 0.93 mm. Sides of head parallel. Legs ( Fig. 3 View Fig ). Tibia and tarsus of each leg with ventral spinulae. Femora AV series with spinulae; PV series with two proximal setae. Abdomen ( Fig. 2A View Fig ). LAS 0.5 times UT. Siphon long (SI/LAS 5 .41). Terga 1–7 with dark spiniform setae; each tergum with two dorsal and two ventral submedial and one lateral setae on each side. Sterna 1–3 with two small pale submedial setae; sterna 4–7 with two dark submedial spiniform setae, other small setae present but not prominent. Urogomphus with U4 and U3 spiniform and pale, U3 short (length of U4/length of U3 5 0.51), U2 setiform and elongate.
Instar III. Colour ( Fig. 6A View Fig ). Head with distinct dark brown and pale yellow areas. Body dorsally brown to grey with lateral and sublateral pale spots on each segment. Head ( Fig. 7A View Fig ). HL 5 2.09 mm, HW 5 1.89 mm. Sides of head parallel. Legs ( Fig. 8 View Fig ). Femora with secondary dorsal spines as follows: profemur four to six; mesofemur—four to five; metafemur five to seven; femora with spinulae in AV series. Abdomen ( Fig. 11A View Fig ). LAS 0.69 times UT. Abdomen with dorsal surface bearing numerous spiniform setae; primary setae setiform.
Ecology. Ilybius biguttulus adults and larvae were collected in small pools and along the edges of larger ponds. In all cases they occurred among the aquatic vegetation and in sites where water levels were variable. Collected female adults laid eggs that hatched in late September. Collected instar I larvae were found in late August and early September. These records support the life history proposed by Hicks and Larson (1995) for this species.
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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