Stictochironomus Kieffer 1919
Creators
Description
Genus Stictochironomus Kieffer
Stictochironomus Kieffer in Kieffer & Thienemann, 1919: 44; Townes 1945: 77 (as subgenus of Tanytarsus); Pinder & Reiss 1983: 343, 1986: 354; Cranston et al. 1989: 415; Epler et al. 2013: 436.
Chironomini genus “ B ” Pinder & Reiss, 1983: 350.
Chironomini genus “ F ” Pinder & Reiss, 1986: 364.
Type species: Chironomus pictulus Meigen, by subsequent designation of Townes (1945: 77).
Emended diagnosis. Pupa. Anal comb consisting of robust teeth, or of slender, very long basal teeth and broad, short apical teeth.
Larva. Mentum with 3–4 median teeth.
Remarks. Generic diagnoses of Stictochironomus have been given by Cranston et al. (1989) for the adult, Pinder & Reiss (1986) for the pupa, and Pinder & Reiss (1983) and Epler et al. (2013) for the larva. However, the diagnoses for the pupa and larva should be emended to safely accommodate the Indian species described here.
Although some immatures of Stictochironomus, not associated with the adult, have caused confusion, the Chironomini genus “ B ” of Pinder & Reiss (1983) and the Chironomini genus “ F ” of Pinder & Reiss (1986) are now regarded as concepts for the larva and the pupa, respectively, of the Stictochironomus caffrarius group (Cranston et al. 1989: 416, Epler 2001: 8.152, Epler et al. 2013: 436, Cranston & Tang 2018: 64). The species group is distinct from the other members of this genus in the larval mentum with 3–4 large median teeth convexly arranged and the pupal anal comb with slender, very long basal teeth and broad, short apical teeth, although it is not separable by the adult morphology. Hitherto, five species of the group have been known in the world: S. polystictus (Kieffer, 1911) from the Oriental region, S. caffrarius (Kieffer, 1921) from the Palaearctic and the Afrotropical regions, S. affinis (Johannsen, 1932) from the Oriental and the Austrasia regions, S. obscurus (Guha & Chaudhuri, 1983) from the Oriental region, and S. caffrarius group sp. Epler, 2001 from the Nearctic region.
In the Chironomini genus “ B ” of Pinder & Reiss (1983) it has been shown that the larva of the species group has four convexly arranged median teeth, but the larvae of three Oriental species, S. polystictus, S. affinis and S. obscurus, as well as the species described here, possess three median teeth. Epler et al. (2013: 436) wrote, “Larvae with only 3 median teeth (cf. Chernovskii (1949), sub. Stictochironomus “connectens” No. 2) may be aberrant specimens, in which 1 of the 2 small median teeth is reduced.” In the larva of the S. caffrarius group, there is little possibility that the median teeth are reduced or aberrant, since the three or four median teeth are large and arranged in convex row.
Notes
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Linked records
Additional details
Identifiers
Biodiversity
- Family
- Chironomidae
- Genus
- Stictochironomus
- Kingdom
- Animalia
- Order
- Diptera
- Phylum
- Arthropoda
- Scientific name authorship
- Kieffer
- Taxon rank
- genus
- Taxonomic concept label
- Stictochironomus Kieffer, 1919 sec. Konar, 2021
References
- Kieffer, J. J. & Thienemann, A. (1919) Chironomiden gesammelt von Dr. A. Koch (Munster i. W) auf den Lofoten, der Bareninsel und Spizbergen (Dipt.). Chironomiden der nordlichen Polarregion. Entomologische Mitteilungen, 8, 3 - 48. https: // doi. org / 10.5962 / bhl. part. 27266
- Townes, H. K. (1945) The nearctic species of Tendipedini (Diptera, Tendipedidae (= Chironomidae). American Midland Naturalist, 34, 1 - 206. https: // doi. org / 10.2307 / 2421112
- Pinder, L. C. V. & Reiss F. (1983) The larva of Chironominae (Diptera: Chironomidae) of the Holarctic region. Keys and diagnoses. In: Wiederholm, T. (Ed.), Chironomidae of the Holarctic region. Keys and diagnoses. Part 1. Larvae. Entomologica scandinavica, 19 (Supplement), pp. 293 - 435.
- Pinder, L. C. V. & Reiss, F. (1986) The pupae of Chironominae (Diptera: Chironomidae) of the Holarctic region. Keys and diagnoses. In: Wiederholm, T. (Ed.), Chironomidae of the Holarctic region. Keys and diagnoses. Part 2. Pupae. Entomologica scandinavica, 28 (Supplement), pp. 299 - 456.
- Cranston, P. S., Dillon, M. E., Pinder, L. V. C. & Reiss, F. (1989) The adult males of Chironominae (Diptera: Chironomidae) of the Holarctic region. In: Wiederholm, T. (Ed.), Chironomidae of the Holarctic region, Keys and diagnoses, Part. 3, Adult males. Entomologica scandinavica, 34 (Supplement), pp. 353 - 502.
- Epler, J. H., Ekrem, T. & Cranston, P. S. (2013) The larvae of Chironomidae (Diptera: Chironomidae) of the Holarctic Region - Keys and diagnoses. In: Andersen, T., Cranston, P. S. & Epler, J. H. (Eds.), The Chironomidae of the Holarctic region - Keys and diagnoses. Insect Systematics & Evolution Supplement, 66, pp. 1 - 573.
- Epler, J. H. (2001) Identification Manual for the larval Chironomidae (Diptera) of North and South Carolina. North Carolina Department of Environment and Natural Resources, Raleigh, and St. Johns River Water Management District, Palatka, 526 pp.
- Cranston, P. & Tang, H. (2018). Skusella Freeman (Diptera: Chironomidae): new species, immature stages from Africa, Asia and Australia, and expanded distributions. Zootaxa, 4450 (1), 41 - 65. https: // doi. org / 10.11646 / zootaxa. 4450.1.3
- Kieffer, J. J. (1911) XI. Description de nouveaux Chironomides de l'Indian Museum de Calcutta. Records of the Indian Museum, 6, 113 - 177. https: // doi. org / 10.5962 / bhl. part. 21331
- Kieffer, J. J. (1921) Nouveaux representants du genre Polypedilum (Chironomides). Annales de la Societe scientifique de Brux- elles, 41, 97 - 101.
- Johannsen, O. A. (1932) LXV. Chironominae of the Malayan subregion of the Dutch East Indies. Archiv fur Hydrobiologie, 11 (Supplement), 503 - 552.
- Guha, D. K. & Chaudhuri, P. K. (1983) Record of Polypedilum Kieffer (Diptera: Chironomidae) in Bhutan and India with a new species from India. Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society, 79 (3), 635 - 638.