Brachycentrus subnubilis Curtis 1834

Konovalova, Daria A., Kislitsina, Nadezhda I. & Zotina, Tatiana A., 2023, Assemblages of Trichoptera larvae on water moss in the middle reaches of the Yenisei River (Siberia, Russia), Zootaxa 5306 (3), pp. 331-348 : 341

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5306.3.2

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:264C8FCC-CB13-463A-BBAD-A75422C77EEC

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8065981

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/090D87B3-FFC3-FF9C-FF0A-D6D3FADAFF08

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Brachycentrus subnubilis Curtis 1834
status

 

Brachycentrus subnubilis Curtis 1834 .

The mesonotum always consists of pairs of sclerites; each metathorax epimeron has a brush of long setae on the anterior edge ( Fig. 10A View FIGURE 10 ). The setae of the mesonotal sclerites are closely adjacent to the posterior edge ( Fig. 10A View FIGURE 10 ). The inner anterior corner of each submesal mesonotal sclerite has 2-4 setae ( Fig. 10A View FIGURE 10 ). The mid- and hind tibiae each have a large apicoventral protrusion bearing a large apical bristle ( Fig. 10B View FIGURE 10 ). The dorsal edges of the middle and hind femora have several secondary setae ( Fig. 10B View FIGURE 10 ); the ventral edges of these femora each has a dense row of short filtering hairs and two long bristles, there are no hypertrophic setae ( Fig. 10B View FIGURE 10 ). The larval case is a slightly conic tetrahedral tube square in cross-section ( Figs 10C, 10D View FIGURE 10 ) up to 1 cm long. A case is constructed from leaves of water moss arranged transversely. Two types of cases were found in our samples. One type has regular transverse ribs on the case surface, which are clearly seen with the naked eye or at a low magnification, and fragments of water moss shoots are embedded in cases at the frontal or distal or both ends of the tube ( Fig. 10C View FIGURE 10 ). Cases of the other type have a smooth surface, but regular structures formed by leaves of water moss embedded at right angles to the longitudinal axis of the case are visible at microscopic magnification ( Fig. 10D View FIGURE 10 ). This species was low in numbers but regularly found in the Trichoptera assemblages on water moss.

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