Published December 31, 2011 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Podmosta weberi

  • 1. and Bill P. Stark & Department of Biological Sciences, P. O. Box 305220, University of North Texas, Denton, Texas 76203, U. S. A. E-mail: stewart @ unt. edu
  • 2. Box 4045, Department of Biology, Mississippi College, Clinton, Mississippi, U. S. A. 39058 E-mail: stark @ mc. edu

Description

Podmosta weberi (Ricker)

(Figs. 8, 12a, 19-22, 27, 32, 36, 38, 41, 49, 50)

Distribution. Alaska and Yukon Territory.

Material Examined. Alaska: Stampede Creek, Kantishna Hills of Denali National Park, 25-VII-1981 (emerged 26-VII-1981), M. Oswood and B. Brown, 1♂ reared; 27-VII-1981 (emerged 29-VII-1981) 1♂ reared; same locality, 1-VII-1984 (emerged 20-VII-1984), D. Volsen, 1♂ reared, 1♀ reared, 7♀ larvae; same locality, 22-VII-1984, D. Volsen, 5♂, 11♀, 1♀ with attached exuvium, 4 exuvia.

Characters. Body length ♂ 4.2-4.5 mm, ♀ 4.5-5.5 mm, light brown with indistinct dark mottled pattern on occiput. Antennal segments approximately 42, head capsule width 0.80-0.90mm; eyes large, head wider than pronotum. Gills absent. Mandibles with 5 or 6 apical teeth; right mandible with raised molar pad (Figs. 19, 21) that grinds against the opposing depressed molar cup of left mandible (Figs. 20, 22), molar cup with outer (dorsal) comb of curved teeth (Figs. 20, 22). Laciniae triangular, typical of genus, palmate, with scalloped palm surface, 7-9 fingerlike apical teeth, apicodorsal comb of about 10 long, acute-pointed bristles and apicoventral comb of about 8 short, acute-pointed bristles (Fig. 27). Pronotum bearing scattered short bristles and sensillae on disc surface and lacking distinct lateral fringe (Fig. 32). Wingpads bearing scattered, short bristles and tuft of short bristles on anterolateral corners (Fig. 36). Femora bearing scattered short bristles and hairs over dorsal surface, longer bristles apicodorsally (Fig. 38). Tibiae bearing scattered short bristles (Fig. 38) and few (5-7) posterior silky fringe hairs. Mesosternal Y-ridge closed anteriorly as in Stewart & Stark (2002; Fig. 9.16E). Abdominal terga bearing macrotrichia and microtrichia scattered on intercalary surface and forming a posterior fringe (Fig. 41). Sexual dimorphism evident; males with raised tergum 10 in lateral view, and developing hypoproct on sternum 9 (Fig. 12a). Cercal segments 22-24, cercomeres 1-10 bearing apical whorls of stout bristles, fine hairs and sensillae, bristles about 0.25 times length of their segment (Fig. 49). Middle and anteapical cercomeres bearing whorl bristles 0.35- 0.60 times length of their segment, with anteapical ones longest ventrally, and with 2- 4 intercalary bristles and/or fine hairs about 0.25 times length of their segment, all as seen laterally 9 (Fig. 50). Diagnostic characters: cercal setation as described (Figs. 49, 50).

Notes

Published as part of Stewart, Kenneth W. & Stark, Bill P., 2011, Further Descriptions Of Western North American Podmosta Larvae And Their Separation From Ostrocerca Larvae (Plecoptera: Nemouridae), pp. 104-117 in Illiesia 7 (10) on page 113, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.4760091

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Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

Event date
1981-07-25 , 1984-07-01 , 1984-07-22
Family
Nemouridae
Genus
Podmosta
Kingdom
Animalia
Order
Plecoptera
Phylum
Arthropoda
Scientific name authorship
Ricker
Species
weberi
Taxon rank
species
Verbatim event date
1981-07-25/26 , 1984-07-01/20
Taxonomic concept label
Podmosta weberi (Ricker, 1952) sec. Stewart & Stark, 2011

References

  • Stewart, K. W. & B. P. Stark. 2002. Nymphs of North American stonefly genera (Plecoptera), 2 nd Ed. The Caddis Press, Columbus, Ohio. 510 pp.