Epeorus (Proepeorus) nipponicus (Uéno, 1931)
publication ID |
https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5594.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:343CB495-974B-44E6-BE81-1D5A552BD777 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14975376 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C700DE52-FFB9-FFF2-FF55-FD5AFF64FD1F |
treatment provided by |
Plazi (2025-03-01 18:06:51, last updated 2025-03-05 17:01:09) |
scientific name |
Epeorus (Proepeorus) nipponicus (Uéno, 1931) |
status |
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Epeorus (Proepeorus) nipponicus (Uéno, 1931) View in CoL ( Figs 20–22 View FIGURE 20 View FIGURE 21 View FIGURE 22 )
[ Japanese name "Yumimon-hirata-kagerou"]
Iron nipponicus : Uéno 1931a: p. 97, fig. 4 (male imago) [ JAPAN: Nagano]; Uéno & Okamoto 1932: p. 1959, fig. 3860 (male imago) [ JAPAN].
Epeorus nipponicus View in CoL : Imanishi 1934: p. 386 (synonymy only); Ishiwata 2002: p. 23, figs 181–184 (nymph, male imago) [ JAPAN: Kanagawa]; Ishiwata & Takemon 2005b: p. 105, figs 45-5, 45-10, 46-6, 47-11, 47-12 (male imago, nymph) [ JAPAN]; Maruyama 2016: p. 173, figs 1-171i, 1-180, 1-282, 1-283, 1-284, 1-285 (male imago, female imago, male subimago, female subimago) [ JAPAN: Hyogo]; Ishiwata et al. 2018: p. 126, figs 45-5, 45-10, 46-6, 47-11, 47-12 (male imago, nymph) [ JAPAN]; Ishiwata & Fujitani 2018: p. 33, pl. 22, fig. 6 (egg) [ JAPAN].
Epeorus (Proepeorus) nipponicus View in CoL : Kluge 2004: p. 204 (name only); Ma et al. 2021: p. 1133, figs 1A–C, 6B, 12C, 13C, 14E–F, 15A, I, 16C (male imago, female imago, nymph) [Northeast CHINA].
Epeorus curvatulus View in CoL auct., non Matsumura, 1931: Imanishi 1934: p. 392, fig. 3 (male imago, female imago, nymph) [ JAPAN: Kyoto]; Imanishi 1940, p. 250, fig. 38 (nymph) [ KOREA, Northeast CHINA]; Uéno 1950: p. 123, fig. 307 (male imago, female imago) [ JAPAN]; Uéno 1959: p. 54 (nymph) [ JAPAN]; Gose 1962: p. 22, fig. 1-11-7 (nymph) [ JAPAN]; Gose 1979: p. 45, figs 14, 21 (male imago, nymph) [ JAPAN]; Okuma 1980: p. 30, fig. 1 (nymph) [ JAPAN: Saitama]; Gose 1985: p. 16, fig. 42 (nymph) [ JAPAN]; Bae et al. 1998: p. 91 (nymph, imagines) [ KOREA, Far East RUSSIA]; Ishiwata 2000: p. 77, fig. 43 (male imago, nymph) [ JAPAN: Kanagawa]; Quan et al. 2002, p. 253, figs 32, 76, 92, 104, 153 (nymph) [Northeast CHINA].
Epeorus (Epeorus) curvatulus View in CoL : Byong & Bae 1984: p. 6, pl. 3, figs a–e (nymph) [ KOREA].
Epeorus (Belovius) curvatulus View in CoL : Tshernova 1981: p. 326, fig. 8 (male imago) [ JAPAN].
Epeorus torrentium View in CoL (non Epeorus torrentium Eaton, 1881 View in CoL ): Uéno 1928: p. 34, misidentification ( Imanishi 1940).
Materials examined. Type specimens: We investigated The Kyoto University Museum collection but could not find the type specimen. Probably lost . Other specimens: JAPAN, HOKKAIDO, ISHIKARI: [4.] Sapporo-shi, Minami-ku, Jozankei , Usubetsu-gawa Stream (a tributary of Toyohira-gawa Riv.), 472 m a.s.l. (42°54'33.5"N, 141°07'28.9"E), GoogleMaps 2 mature male nymphs, 8.IX.2002, K. Saito; [5.] Sapporo-shi, Minami-ku, Jozankei, Shirai-gawa Stream (a tributary of Toyohira-gawa Riv.), the confluence of Shirai-gawa Stream and Migimata-gawa Stream, 450 m a.s.l. (42°59'39.6"N, 141°04'42.9"E), GoogleMaps 1 mature male nymph and 1 mature female nymph, 07.VIII.2004, K. Saito; [15.] Sapporo-shi, Chuo-ku, Minami 13-jo, Nishi 1-chome, Toyohira-gawa Riv., mainstream, 28 m a.s.l. (43°02'35.3"N, 141°21'31.7"E), GoogleMaps 2 mature male nymphs and 4 mature female nymphs, 19.VIII.2020, T. Takayanagi; ditto, 1 male mature nymph and 1 female mature nymph, 08.VIII.2021, T. Takayanagi ; [16.] Sapporo-shi , Chuo-ku , Kita 1-jo, Higashi 19-chome, Toyohira-gawa Riv., mainstream, 15 m a.s.l. (43°04'04.8"N, 141°23'13.2"E), GoogleMaps 1 mature male nymph and 1 mature female nymph, 21.VIII.2021, T. Takayanagi GoogleMaps .
Nymph (mature, in ethanol), redescription ( Figs 20–22 View FIGURE 20 View FIGURE 21 View FIGURE 22 ).
Body length 11.0 mm (male), 10.0–12.0 mm (female). Cercus length ca. body length x 1.3–1.4.
Head. Shape trapezoidal. Color dark-brown, with white markings. Compound eyes dark gray. Ocelli dark gray. Antennae white, basally brown or completely brown. Anterior margin densely covered with fine hair-like setae extending to lateral margins. Dorsal surface of head covered with fine hair-like setae ( Figs 21a, b View FIGURE 21 ). Labrum: anterior and lateral margins evenly convex, anterior margin medially concave. Ventral surface with a row of bristles along lateral margins extending to anterior margins, row of short setae and brush of median fine hair-like setae on each side. Dorsal surface with six long adjacent bristles medially and two long bristles near each side of antero-lateral margin, and scattered variable-length setae ( Fig. 22a View FIGURE 22 ). Mandibles: each outer incisor with three apical teeth (right mandible) or two apical teeth (left mandible) and serrated margins, inner incisor with two apical teeth (right mandible) or three apical teeth (left mandible) and outer margin of both inner incisors sharply serrated, right inner incisor slender and almost straight. Tuft of long setae on the base of inner incisor of right mandible, tuft of long setae and one plumose seta on the base of inner incisor of left mandible ( Figs 22b, c View FIGURE 22 ). Maxillae: One penicillate seta at base of apical tooth complex ( Fig. 28d View FIGURE 28 ). Hypopharynx: superlinguae distally widened, lingua subquadrate. Labium: Labial palps two segmented, outer margin of proximal one with sparse, thick setae. Distal segment with sparse, hair-like setae on outer surface and dense, brush-like setae on distal 1/3 area. Glossae and paraglossae with long, dense setae.
Thorax. Color dark brown dorsally, white ventrally ( Fig. 20 View FIGURE 20 ). Pronotum margin roundly projecting laterally ( Fig. 29c View FIGURE 29 ). Legs. Each femur with dark brown markings and a hypodermal black spot on middle part of anterior face ( Fig. 21c View FIGURE 21 ), blade-like long setae on dorsal edge, and short bluntly pointed spines on ventral edge. Femoral setae diversely shaped: semi-oblong, maize-grain-shape or semi-circular ( Fig. 22d View FIGURE 22 ). Tibia with two dark-brown markings, long hair like setae on its dorsal edge ( Fig. 21c View FIGURE 21 ). Tarsus darker in proximal area, long hair like setae on its dorsal edge ( Fig. 21c View FIGURE 21 ). Tarsal claw with four small denticles.
Abdomen. Terga dark-brown, each tergum with a pair of dark spots ( Figs 20a, d View FIGURE 20 ). Sterna white, each sternum with a pair of slightly blackish spots ( Figs 20b, e View FIGURE 20 ). Each tergum with a pair of rows of sparse long setae located to each side of midline. Posterior margin of each segment with several long setae and diversely shaped spines which are pointed, blunt or spatulate and arranged in an irregular line, overlapping in 2–3 levels ( Figs 22j View FIGURE 22 , 31d View FIGURE 31 ). Each of terga I–VII with three postero-lateral projections, ventral and dorsal ones blunt, lateral one short-tipped ( Fig. 30d View FIGURE 30 ). Posterior margin of sternum IX round with relatively rounded emargination ( Figs 22h, i View FIGURE 22 ). Dorsal surface of cercus with a row of fine setae. Gills. Costal and posterior half part of each gill brown ( Fig. 21d View FIGURE 21 ). Gill I not anteriorly elongate ( Fig. 22e View FIGURE 22 ). Gills II–VII oval ( Figs 22f, g View FIGURE 22 ). Costal margin of gill I with fine setae. Costal margin of gills II–VII with small spines and fine setae forming a rough surface. Gill II–VII with anal ribs on anal margin. Each gill plate with filaments forming a fan-shape together. Gill VII without longitudinal fold ( Fig. 22g View FIGURE 22 ).
Imagines of this species were not obtained in this study.
Diagnosis and comparison. Nymph. Gill I is not extended anteriorly, and gill VII lacks a longitudinal fold, in contrast to E. curvatulus and E. aesculus . Immature nymph’s display a blackish streak on the posterior part of each abdominal tergum, similar to E. aesculus , but this streak diminishes in mature nymphs.
Remarks. Nymph. According to Okuma (1980) and Ishiwata et al. (2018), nymphs of this species can be distinguished from the similar species E. ikanonis Takahashi, 1924 , by the length of the cerci and seasonal growth patterns. In E. ikanonis , the cerci length is roughly equal to the body length, whereas in E. nipponicus , it is about 1.5 times the body length. Mature nymphs of E. ikanonis are observed from winter to early spring, while those of E. nipponicus appear in autumn. Subgenus attribution. Our observation fully supports the classification by Ma et al. (2021) which assigned this species to the subgenus Proepeorus based on male imaginal characteristics. Nymphs of this subgenus are characterized by the following features: 1) gills II–VII possess an anal rib along the anal margin; 2) gill I is not elongated; and 3) gill VII lacks a longitudinal fold ( Kluge 2004). The subgenus Epeorus s. str. (= Epeorus /fg4) also shares these traits, with male imaginal penial structures being the only distinguishing feature between Proepeorus and Epeorus s. str.
The taxonomic status of this species has been ambiguous. Uéno (1931a) first described the species based on material collected from the Nakabusa-gawa River in Nagano, central Honshu. However, the type specimens were likely lost (Author's investigation 2019). Imanishi (1934) included this species in his monograph without any accompanying explanation. Since then, it has been omitted from major works, such as Gose's monograph on Japanese mayflies ( Gose 1979). Ishiwata (2001a; 2018) listed the species as valid and described its diagnostic characters ( Ishiwata 2002; Ishiwata et al. 2018), which allowed for its identification. The nymphal morphology of this species, in its current sense, closely aligns with Imanishi's (1934) description of E. curvatulus , suggesting that E. nipponicus may have been misidentified as E. curvatulus in Imanishi's work. Ma et al. (2021) published a revision of Epeorus (Proepeorus) in China, providing a detailed description of the morphology of E. nipponicus . The nymphal morphology observed, particularly the structure of the mouthparts and the posterior margin of the abdominal terga, aligns closely with our observations.
A similar species, E. anatolii Sinitshenkova, 1981 , was described from Far East Russia based on female nymphs, and the description aligns completely with our observations. Bae et al. (1998) later synonymized this species with E. curvatulus , likely based on Imanishi’s concept, which may have confused E. curvatulus with E. nipponicus . However, the nymphal morphologies of E. curvatulus and E. nipponicus are distinctly different, suggesting that E. anatolii should potentially be synonymized with E. nipponicus . Nevertheless, confirming this requires examination of the type specimens of E. anatolii , as also discussed by Ma et al. (2021).
Emergence periods and habitat. Mature nymphs were obtained after August in the study areas. This species was obtained from a wide area within the Toyohira-gawa River system.
Distribution. Japan (Hokkaido, Honshu, Shikoku, and Kyushu), Korea, China (Northeast), and Russia (Far East).
Bae, Y. J., Kluge, N. J. & Chun, D. J. (1998) New synonymy and new data on the distribution of the mayflies from Korea and the Russian Far East. Zoosystematica Rossica, 7, 90-94.
Byong, Y. I. & Bae, Y. J. (1984) The Classification of Heptageniidae (Ephemeroptera) in Korea. Entomological Research Bulletin, 10, 1-34.
Eaton, A. E. (1881) An announcement of new genera of the Ephemeridae. Entomologist's Monthly Magazine, 18, 21-27.
Gose, K. (1962) Ephemeroptera. In: Tsuda, M. (Ed.), Aquatic Entomology. Hokuryukan, Tokyo, pp. 6-24. [in Japanese]
Gose, K. (1979) The mayflies of Japanese (4). Aquabiology, 1 (4), 44-46. [in Japanese]
Gose, K. (1985) Ephemeroptera. In: Kawai, T. (Ed.), An Illustrated Book of Aquatic Insects of Japan. Univ. Tokai Press, Tokyo, pp. 7-32. [in Japanese]
Imanishi, K. (1934) Mayflies from Japanese Torrents IV. Notes on the genus Epeorus. Annotationes Zoologicae Japonense, 14, 380-394.
Imanishi, K. (1940) Ephemeroptera of Manchuria, Inner Mongolia and Korea. In: Kawamura, T. (Ed.), Report of the liminological survey of Kwantung and Manchoukuo, Kyoto, Japan, 1940, pp. 169-263. [in Japanese]
Ishiwata, S. (2000) Notes on mayflies in Kanagawa Prefecture. Natural History Report of Kanagawa, 21, 73-82. [in Japanese]
Ishiwata, S. (2001 a) A checklist of Japanese Ephemeroptera. In: The 21 st Century and Aquatic Entomology in East Asia. roceedings of the 1 st. Symposium of Aquatic Entomologists in East Asia (AESEA). Korean Society of Aquatic Entomology Korea, Seoul, pp. 55-84.
Ishiwata, S. (2002) Mayflies of Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan. Kanagawa-Chuho, 138, 1-46. [in Japanese]
Ishiwata, S. & Takemon, Y. (2005 b) Ephemeroptera. In: Kawai, T. & Tanida, K. (Eds.), Aquatic insects of Japan: manual with keys and illustration. Tokai University Press, Kanagawa, pp. 31-128. [in Japanese]
Ishiwata, S. & Fujitani, T. (2018) Eggs of Japanese Ephemeroptera. Kanagawa Institute of Technology, Division for Environmental Chemistry Research Report, 7 (Supplement 2), March 2018, 1-63.
Kluge, N. J. (2004) The Phylogenetic System of Ephemeroptera. Kluwer Academic Publishers, Dordrecht, 442 pp. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-0872-3
Ma, Z. X., Lei, Z. M., Li, W. J. & Zhou, C. F. (2021) A revision of Epeorus (Proepeorus) in China, with descriptions of two new species (Ephemeroptera, Heptageniidae). Journal of Natural History, 55 (17 - 18), 1131-1159. https://doi.org/10.1080/00222933.2021.1936679
Maruyama, H. (2016) Ephemeroptera. In: Maruyama, H. & Hanada, S. (Eds.), A Field Guide to Japanese Aquatic Insects: Adults of Mayflies, Stoneflies and Caddisflies. Zenkoku Noson Kyoiku Kyokai Co., Ltd, Tokyo, pp. 90-178. [in Japanese]
Matsumura, S. (1931) 6000 Illustrated Insects of Japan-Empire. Toko-shoin, Tokyo, 1497 pp. [in Japanese]
Okuma, K. (1980) The nymphs of Epeorus ikanonis and Epeorus nipponicus. The nature and insects, 15 (10), 30-31. [in Japanese] *
Quan, Y. T., Bae, Y. J., Jung, J. C. & Lee, J. W. (2002) Ephemeroptera (Insecta) fauna of northeast China. Insecta Koreana, 19 (3 & 4), 241-269.
Sinitshenkova, N. D. (1981) To the knowledge of nymphs of the genus Epeorus Eaton (Ephemeroptera, Heptageniidae). Entomologicheskoe Obozrenie, 60 (4), 813-823. [in Russian]
Takahashi, Y. (1924) Some new species of Japanese mayflies. Zoological Magazine (Doubutsugaku Zasshi), 36, 377-380. [in Japanese] *
Tshernova, O. A. (1981) On the systematics of adult mayflies of the genus Epeorus Eaton, 1881 (Ephemeroptera, Heptageniidae). Entomologicheskoe Obozrenie, 60 (2), 323-336. [in Russian]
Ueno, M. (1928) Some Japanese mayfly nymphs. Memoirs of the college of science, Kyoto Imperial University, Series B, 4 (1), 19-63.
Ueno, M. (1931 a) Einige neue Ephemeropteren und Plecopteren aus Mittel-Japan. Annotationes zoologicae Japonenses, 13 (2), 91-104.
Ueno, M. & Okamoto, H. (1932) Ephemeroptera. In: Uchida, S. (Ed.), Nippon Kontyu Zukan. Hokuryukan, Tokyo, pp. 1950-1962. [in Japanese]
Ueno, M. (1950) Ephemeroptera. In: Ishii, T. (Ed.), Nippon Kontyu Zukan. Hokuryukan, Tokyo, pp. 120-130. [in Japanese]
Ueno, M. (1959) Mayflies and stonefly nymphs. In: Kawata, T. (Ed.), Illustrated Insect Larvae of Japan. Hokuryukan, Tokyo, pp. 44-58. [in Japanese]
FIGURE 20a–f. Epeorus nipponicus, mature nymph, habitus. a. Male, dorsal view; b. Male, ventral view; c. Male, lateral view; d. Female, dorsal view; e. Female, ventral view; f. Female, lateral view. Scales: a–f 2 mm.
FIGURE 21a–d. Epeorus nipponicus, mature nymph. a. Male head, dorsal view; b. Female head, dorsal view; c. Right middle leg, anterior face; d. Gills I–VII (from right to left), dorsal view. Scales: a–d 1mm.
FIGURE 22a–j. Epeorus nipponicus, nymph. a. Labrum (left half in ventral view, right half in dorsal view); b. Incisors of right mandible (ventral view); c. Incisors of left mandible (ventral view); d. Setae on dorsal surface of femora; e. Gill I; f. Gill II; g. Gill VII; h. Sternum IX of male; i. Sternum IX of female; j. Posterior margin of tergum VII.
FIGURE 28a–e. Setae at the base of apical tooth of maxilla (left half right, right half left). a. Epeorus latifolium; b. E. L-nigrum; c. E. curvatulus; d. E. nipponicus; e. E. aesculus.
FIGURE 29a–d. Lateral margin of pronotum, left. a. Epeorus latifolium, and E. L-nigrum; b. E. curvatulus; c. E. nipponicus; d. E. aesculus.
FIGURE 30a–f. Postero-lateral projections of abdominal tergum IV, dorsal (left) and lateral (right). a. Epeorus latifolium; b. E. L-nigrum; c. E. curvatulus; d. E. nipponicus; e. E. aesculus; f. Correspondence of projections from a different view (dotted lines).
T |
Tavera, Department of Geology and Geophysics |
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.
Kingdom |
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Order |
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Family |
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Genus |
Epeorus (Proepeorus) nipponicus (Uéno, 1931)
Takayanagi, Tatsushi & Yoshizawa, Kazunori 2025 |
Epeorus (Epeorus) curvatulus
Byong, Y. I. & Bae, Y. J. 1984: 6 |
Epeorus (Belovius) curvatulus
Tshernova, O. A. 1981: 326 |
Epeorus curvatulus
Quan, Y. T. & Bae, Y. J. & Jung, J. C. & Lee, J. W. 2002: 253 |
Ishiwata, S. 2000: 77 |
Bae, Y. J. & Kluge, N. J. & Chun, D. J. 1998: 91 |
Gose, K. 1985: 16 |
Okuma, K. 1980: 30 |
Gose, K. 1979: 45 |
Gose, K. 1962: 22 |
Ueno, M. 1959: 54 |
Ueno, M. 1950: 123 |
Imanishi, K. 1940: 250 |
Imanishi, K. 1934: 392 |
Iron nipponicus
Ueno, M. & Okamoto, H. 1932: 1959 |
Ueno, M. 1931: 97 |
Epeorus torrentium
Ueno, M. 1928: 34 |
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