Capnia
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4059.2.8 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:550E33DB-F2EE-412E-8935-CF82065B4562 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6102860 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C37D87B5-6650-FF95-FF01-FF71FACDFB05 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Capnia |
status |
s.l. |
Capnia View in CoL s.l. pedestris species group sensu Zwick & Sivec 1980
This group was erected for eleven Asian species ( Alouf 1992, Murányi et al. 2014, Zhiltzova 2003, Zwick & Sivec 1980). Here we exclude two species known from the Caucasus, Anatolia and the Levant, C. s.l. arensi Zhiltzova, 1964 and C. s.l. bicornata Alouf, 1992 , because of the marked differences in epiproctal structures noted by Murányi et al. (2014). The rest of the species are known from the central high mountains of Asia. Seven species occur in the Tien Shan and Pamir ranges of the Palaearctic ( Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan); two of these are also known from the Oriental Realm. Four further species, among one that is here assigned to the group, occur exclusively in the Oriental Realm:
Capnia View in CoL s.l. bifida Jewett, 1960 View in CoL
Jewett 1960: description of male and female, holotype, allotype and paratypes from Himachal Pradesh State of
India: Lahaul and Spiti District.
Jewett 1970: further records from the same District of Himachal Pradesh. Known only from a small area of the Western Himalayas.
Capnia View in CoL s.l. sp., aff. bimaculata Zhiltzova, 1969 View in CoL
Zwick & Sivec 1980: description of male, female and larva, from Afghanistan: Hindukush ranges
(Badakhshan Province); comparision with unspecified Palaearctic specimens of C. s.l. bimaculata View in CoL . The nominal C. s.l. bimaculata View in CoL is known from nearby areas of the Palaearctic: Pamir and Tien Shan ranges ( Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan). The Oriental Realm population from the Hindukush was reported from the same area (localities less than 10 km apart) as C. s.l. noshaqensis Kawai, 1966 View in CoL , and the two are probably conspecific.
Capnia View in CoL s.l. femina Kawai, 1968
Kawai 1968: description of female and larva, holotype and paratypes from Nepal: Sagarmantha Zone. Hitherto known only from the types collected from the slope of Mt. Everest.
Capnia View in CoL s.l. longicauda Zhiltzova, 1969 View in CoL
Capnia View in CoL sp.: Šámal 1935: data of females from Jammu and Kashmir State of India: Karakoram ranges (Siachen Region); whereabouts of the localities Skiang Poche and Chimsin-Jilgha Valley, from where he reported it as a further Capnia View in CoL female and an additonal one as Nephelopteryx spec.? are unknown.
Zwick & Sivec 1980: complementary description of male and female, resolve the identity of specimens reported by Šámal (1935) (as Capnia View in CoL spec. and Nephelopteryx spec.?) are C. s.l. longicauda View in CoL , and first records from Nepal: Dhawalagiri and Karnali zones.
Sivec 1982: first report from Nepal: Mechi zone.
Besides E. stigmatica transversa View in CoL , this species has the widest distribution among the Capniidae View in CoL known from the
Oriental Realm. Reported from the eastern Himalayas and the Karakoram, and originally was described from the
Palaearctic: Tien Shan Ranges ( Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan).
Capnia View in CoL s.l. noshaqensis Kawai, 1966 View in CoL
Kawai 1966: description of female, holotype and paratypes from Pakistan: Hindukush ranges (Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province).
The species was not previously assigned to the pedestris group, but the female subgenital plate suggests this classification. Hitherto known only from the female types. As mentioned above, probably conspecific with C. s.l. sp., aff. bimaculata View in CoL sensu Zwick & Sivec 1980.
Capnia View in CoL s.l. pedestris Kimmins, 1946
Kimmins 1946: description of male, holotype from Tibet Autonomous Region of China: Shigatse prefecture; notes on the probable larva.
Aubert 1959: description of female and larva from Pakistan: Himalayan ranges (Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Province).
Kawai 1963: complementary description of larva from Pakistan: Karakoram ranges (Gilgit-Baltistan administrative territory) and Jammu and Kashmir State of India: Himalayan ranges (Ladakh region).
Allocapniella pedestris ( Kimmins, 1946) : Kawai 1966: comb. n., complementary description of male and larva
from Pakistan: Hindukush ranges (Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province).
Zwick & Sivec 1980: complementary description of male, material not specified.
Kawai (1966) transferred this species to Allocapniella Kawai, 1955 on the basis of thoracal sclerites. This combination was already ignored (e.g. Zhiltzova 1974, Zwick & Sivec 1980) and when Allocapniella proved to be junior synonym of Apteroperla Matsumura, 1931 View in CoL this species was not mentioned among the new combinations ( Shimizu 1997). Here we support its exclusion from Apteroperla View in CoL , on the basis of having rather different genitalia characters, e.g. lack of eversible crest and having elongated fusion plate (compare Figs. 13–14 View FIGURES 9 – 13 View FIGURES 14 – 16 , 27 in Murányi et al. (2014) with Figs. 48.G–H in Kawai (1967)). It has a rather wide distribution: in addition to Central (Eastern) Himalayas, Karakoram and Hindukush, it is reported also from the Palaearctis: Pamir ranges ( Tajikistan).
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Capnia
Murányi, Dávid, Li, Weihai & Yang, Ding 2015 |
aff. bimaculata
Zwick & Sivec 1980 |
aff. bimaculata
Zhiltzova 1969 |
longicauda
Zhiltzova 1969 |
femina
Kawai 1968 |
noshaqensis
Kawai 1966 |
noshaqensis
Kawai 1966 |
bifida
Jewett 1960 |
Allocapniella
Kawai 1955 |
pedestris
Kimmins 1946 |
Allocapniella pedestris (
Kimmins 1946 |
Apteroperla
Matsumura 1931 |