Ephemera (Ephemera) sachalinensis Matsumura, 1911

Tiunova, Tatiana M., 2024, Egg morphology of six East Palaearctic species of the genus Ephemera Linnaeus (Ephemeroptera: Ephemeridae), Zootaxa 5497 (3), pp. 381-399 : 387

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5497.3.4

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:BFEC2071-EFCF-4489-93AD-18F3B0DCDBC6

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13618918

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/970A878D-FFAC-0E15-FF22-FF4ACDEEFC98

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Ephemera (Ephemera) sachalinensis Matsumura, 1911
status

 

Ephemera (Ephemera) sachalinensis Matsumura, 1911 View in CoL

Figures 9–15 View FIGURES 9–11 View FIGURES 12–15

Material examined. Russia: Primorsky Krai, Khasansky District, Barabashevka River, below Fish Hatchery , 03.08.2007, 2♀ adults, T. Tiunova; Ryazanovka River , below Okhotbaza, 11.06.2003, 2♀ adults, T. Tiunova; Sakhalinskaya Oblast , Sakhalin Island, Lake Vavayskoye, eastern part, 18.07.2002, 3♀ adults, V. Teslenko; Amurskaya Oblast , Amur River basin, Bureya River, below Kulikovka village , 3♀ adults, T. Tiunova .

Distribution. East Siberia, Far East Russia, Mongolia, Korea, China, Kazakhstan (Irtysh River basin).

The egg has an oval shape close to quadrangular with rounded corners ( Fig. 9 View FIGURES 9–11 ). Dimensions: 204.0–230.0 µm in length (213.5 µm) and 118.0–132.0 µm in width (125.8 µm). The thickness of the extrachorion-adhesive layer is 1.9–3.0 µm ( Fig. 15 View FIGURES 12–15 ). The surface of the adhesive layer is shagreen or roughened ( Fig. 9 View FIGURES 9–11 ). There are one or two micropyles per egg in the equatorial area ( Figs 9 View FIGURES 9–11 , 13 View FIGURES 12–15 ). Micropyles are “tagenoform-type” ( Figs 9–10 View FIGURES 9–11 ), sperm guide weakly expressed (6.4–9.7 µm long, 3.0–5.0 µm wide), almost rectangular, elongated, distal margin not closed ( Figs 10–11 View FIGURES 9–11 ). The micropylar canal, about 5 μm long, does not protrude above the adhesive layer ( Figs 9–10 View FIGURES 9–11 ). Chorionic sculpturing consists of interrupted broken ridges, whose distribution and arrangement extend regularly over the whole chorion surface ( Figs 12–13 View FIGURES 12–15 ). The proximal part of the micropylar opening (MO) does not elevate above the chorion ( Figs 13–14 View FIGURES 12–15 ).

T

Tavera, Department of Geology and Geophysics

V

Royal British Columbia Museum - Herbarium

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Ephemeroptera

Family

Ephemeridae

Genus

Ephemera

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