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Trichoptera Limnephilidae)
Biodiversity Journal, 2015, 6 (1): 3–6 First record of Mesophylax aspersus (Rambur, 1842) from the Republic of Kosovo (Trichoptera Limnephilidae) Halil Ibrahimi, Agim Gashi, Linda Grapci-Kotori*, Astrit Bilalli, Milaim Musliu & Ferdije Zhushi-Etemi Department of Biology, Faculty of Mathematical and Natural Sciences, University of Prishtina “Hasan Prishtina”, “Mother Theresa” p.n., 10 000 Prishtina, Republic of Kosovo *Corresponding author, e-mail: [email protected] ABSTRACT The distribution of Mesophylax aspersus Curtis, 1834 (Trichoptera Limnephilidae) ranges from Western Europe, Mediterranean region, Madeira, Canary Islands and up to South- western Asia. According to the present knowledge it is however almost absent from South- eastern Europe. In this paper we present first record of M. aspersus from the Republic of Kosovo. This is at the same time first country record of the genus. Unlike many countries where this species is present abundantly in our case it is extremely rare. A single adult male specimen of M. aspersus was found in an ultraviolet light trap at the Blinajë Hunting Reserve on August 23rd 2013. This has been a single specimen of this species caught at this locality during a one year monthly sampling of caddisflies with UV light traps and entomological net. Another male specimen has been caught on September 24th 2014 at the same locality. Streams and rivers in all parts of Kosovo were surveyed during the period 2009-2014 for Trichoptera species and currently the Blinajë Hunting Reserve is the only locality where this species has been found. The distributional area of this species has been considerably expan- ded by this record. -
Diversity and Ecosystem Services of Trichoptera
Review Diversity and Ecosystem Services of Trichoptera John C. Morse 1,*, Paul B. Frandsen 2,3, Wolfram Graf 4 and Jessica A. Thomas 5 1 Department of Plant & Environmental Sciences, Clemson University, E-143 Poole Agricultural Center, Clemson, SC 29634-0310, USA; [email protected] 2 Department of Plant & Wildlife Sciences, Brigham Young University, 701 E University Parkway Drive, Provo, UT 84602, USA; [email protected] 3 Data Science Lab, Smithsonian Institution, 600 Maryland Ave SW, Washington, D.C. 20024, USA 4 BOKU, Institute of Hydrobiology and Aquatic Ecology Management, University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Gregor Mendelstr. 33, A-1180 Vienna, Austria; [email protected] 5 Department of Biology, University of York, Wentworth Way, York Y010 5DD, UK; [email protected] * Correspondence: [email protected]; Tel.: +1-864-656-5049 Received: 2 February 2019; Accepted: 12 April 2019; Published: 1 May 2019 Abstract: The holometabolous insect order Trichoptera (caddisflies) includes more known species than all of the other primarily aquatic orders of insects combined. They are distributed unevenly; with the greatest number and density occurring in the Oriental Biogeographic Region and the smallest in the East Palearctic. Ecosystem services provided by Trichoptera are also very diverse and include their essential roles in food webs, in biological monitoring of water quality, as food for fish and other predators (many of which are of human concern), and as engineers that stabilize gravel bed sediment. They are especially important in capturing and using a wide variety of nutrients in many forms, transforming them for use by other organisms in freshwaters and surrounding riparian areas. -
Bibliographia Trichopterorum
Entry numbers checked/adjusted: 23/10/12 Bibliographia Trichopterorum Volume 4 1991-2000 (Preliminary) ©Andrew P.Nimmo 106-29 Ave NW, EDMONTON, Alberta, Canada T6J 4H6 e-mail: [email protected] [As at 25/3/14] 2 LITERATURE CITATIONS [*indicates that I have a copy of the paper in question] 0001 Anon. 1993. Studies on the structure and function of river ecosystems of the Far East, 2. Rep. on work supported by Japan Soc. Promot. Sci. 1992. 82 pp. TN. 0002 * . 1994. Gunter Brückerman. 19.12.1960 12.2.1994. Braueria 21:7. [Photo only]. 0003 . 1994. New kind of fly discovered in Man.[itoba]. Eco Briefs, Edmonton Journal. Sept. 4. 0004 . 1997. Caddis biodiversity. Weta 20:40-41. ZRan 134-03000625 & 00002404. 0005 . 1997. Rote Liste gefahrdeter Tiere und Pflanzen des Burgenlandes. BFB-Ber. 87: 1-33. ZRan 135-02001470. 0006 1998. Floods have their benefits. Current Sci., Weekly Reader Corp. 84(1):12. 0007 . 1999. Short reports. Taxa new to Finland, new provincial records and deletions from the fauna of Finland. Ent. Fenn. 10:1-5. ZRan 136-02000496. 0008 . 2000. Entomology report. Sandnats 22(3):10-12, 20. ZRan 137-09000211. 0009 . 2000. Short reports. Ent. Fenn. 11:1-4. ZRan 136-03000823. 0010 * . 2000. Nattsländor - Trichoptera. pp 285-296. In: Rödlistade arter i Sverige 2000. The 2000 Red List of Swedish species. ed. U.Gärdenfors. ArtDatabanken, SLU, Uppsala. ISBN 91 88506 23 1 0011 Aagaard, K., J.O.Solem, T.Nost, & O.Hanssen. 1997. The macrobenthos of the pristine stre- am, Skiftesaa, Haeylandet, Norway. Hydrobiologia 348:81-94. -
An Annotated Checklist of the Irish Hemiptera and Small Orders
AN ANNOTATED CHECKLIST OF THE IRISH HEMIPTERA AND SMALL ORDERS compiled by James P. O'Connor and Brian Nelson The Irish Biogeographical Society OTHER PUBLICATIONS AVAILABLE FROM THE IRISH BIOGEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY OCCASIONAL PUBLICATIONS OF THE IRISH BIOGEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY (A5 FORMAT) Number 1. Proceedings of The Postglacial Colonization Conference. D. P. Sleeman, R. J. Devoy and P. C. Woodman (editors). Published 1986. 88pp. Price €4 (Please add €4 for postage outside Ireland for each publication); Number 2. Biogeography of Ireland: past, present and future. M. J. Costello and K. S. Kelly (editors). Published 1993. 149pp. Price €15; Number 3. A checklist of Irish aquatic insects. P. Ashe, J. P. O’Connor and D. A. Murray. Published 1998. 80pp. Price €7; Number 4. A catalogue of the Irish Braconidae (Hymenoptera: Ichneumonoidea). J. P. O’Connor, R. Nash and C. van Achterberg. Published 1999. 123pp. Price €6; Number 5. The distribution of the Ephemeroptera in Ireland. M. Kelly-Quinn and J. J. Bracken. Published 2000. 223pp. Price €12; Number 6. A catalogue of the Irish Chalcidoidea (Hymenoptera). J. P. O’Connor, R. Nash and Z. Bouček. Published 2000. 135pp. Price €10; Number 7. A catalogue of the Irish Platygastroidea and Proctotrupoidea (Hymenoptera). J. P. O’Connor, R. Nash, D. G. Notton and N. D. M. Fergusson. Published 2004. 110pp. Price €10; Number 8. A catalogue and index of the publications of the Irish Biogeographical Society (1977-2004). J. P. O’Connor. Published 2005. 74pp. Price €10; Number 9. Fauna and flora of Atlantic islands. Proceedings of the 5th international symposium on the fauna and flora of the Atlantic islands, Dublin 24 -27 August 2004. -
New Species of Limnephilidae (Insecta: Trichoptera) from Europe: Alps and Pyrenees As Harbours of Unknown Biodiversity
Zootaxa 3911 (3): 381–395 ISSN 1175-5326 (print edition) www.mapress.com/zootaxa/ Article ZOOTAXA Copyright © 2015 Magnolia Press ISSN 1175-5334 (online edition) http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.3911.3.5 http://zoobank.org/urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:4E11C1AB-2614-4C4A-809D-EF7C5BE959D9 New species of Limnephilidae (Insecta: Trichoptera) from Europe: Alps and Pyrenees as harbours of unknown biodiversity WOLFRAM GRAF1,5, SIMON VITECEK2, ANA PREVIŠIĆ3 & HANS MALICKY4 1Institute of Hydrobiology and Aquatic Ecosystem Management, University of Natural Resources and Applied Life Sciences, Max Emanuel-Strasse 17, A-1180 Vienna, Austria. E-mail: [email protected] 2Department of Limnology & Bio-Oceanography, Faculty of Life Sciences, University of Vienna, Althanstrasse 14, A-1090 Vienna, Austria. E-mail: [email protected] 3Department of Biology, Faculty of Science, University of Zagreb, Rooseveltov trg 6, HR-10000 Zagreb, Croatia. E-mail: [email protected] 4Sonnengasse 13, Lunz am See A-3293, Austria. 5Corresponding author Abstract New species are described from the genera Consorophylax and Anisogamus (Trichoptera, Limnephilidae, Limnephilinae, Stenophylacini). Additionally the larva of the genus Anisogamus, and the larval stages of Anisogamus waringeri sp. nov. and A. difformis (McLachlan 1867) are described. The new species Consorophylax vinconi sp. nov. is a microendemic from the Southern Alps and differs from its congeners in the shape of the parameres, which are distinctly straitened in the distal quarter in the new species. The new species Anisogamus waringeri sp. nov. represents the second species in the hitherto monospecific genus Anisogamus. Compared to Anisogamus difformis, the male of A. -
(2001) Notes on the Taxonomy of Rhadicoleptus, Ptilocolepus And
ZOBODAT - www.zobodat.at Zoologisch-Botanische Datenbank/Zoological-Botanical Database Digitale Literatur/Digital Literature Zeitschrift/Journal: Braueria Jahr/Year: 2001 Band/Volume: 28 Autor(en)/Author(s): Malicky Hans Artikel/Article: Notes on the taxonomy of Rhadicoleptus, Ptilocolepus and Pseudoneureclipsis. 19-20 © Hans Malicky/Austria; download unter www.biologiezentrum.at 19 BRAUERIA (Lunz am See, Austria) 28:19-20 (2001) similar. Using this method, I suppose that Rucenorum belongs to Stenophylacini, and should be placed somewhere near Anisogamus and Platyphylax. For Ralpestris, I could not find an appropriate Notes on the taxonomy of Rhadicoleptus, relationship. Ptilocolepus and Pseudoneureclipsis. Hans MALICKY Abstract. Ptilocolepinae is raised to family rank Ptilocolepidae. The placement of Pseudoneureclipsis in Dipseudopsidae is considered to be incorrect. The female of Rhadicoleptus ucenorum is figured, and it is suggested that the species belongs to Stenophylacini rather than to Limnephilini. I. Rhadicoleptus In his revision of the Limnephilidae, SCHMID (1955) placed the genus Rhadicoleptus, with the species alpestris, spinifer and ucenorum, in his newly created tribe Limnephilini. Rspinifer is now considered a subspecies of Ralpestris; Rucenorum remained relatively unknown. MCLACHLAN (1874-80) who described Rucenorum had collected it himself in the French Alps on 8 July 1876 "at a small land-spring at the highest point of the mule-path leading from Bourg d'Oisans to Villard Reymond (about 4800 feet). A few days later it was abundant at land-springs on the treeless flowery slopes of the Col du Lautaret (about 5500 feet)..." On 10 July 2001 I went to Villard Reymond but failed to find this insect there. -
Refinement of the Basin-Wide Index of Biotic Integrity for Non-Tidal Streams and Wadeable Rivers in the Chesapeake Bay Watershed
Refinement of the Basin-Wide Index of Biotic Integrity for Non-Tidal Streams and Wadeable Rivers in the Chesapeake Bay Watershed APPENDICES Appendix A: Taxonomic Classification Appendix B: Taxonomic Attributes Appendix C: Taxonomic Standardization Appendix D: Rarefaction Appendix E: Biological Metric Descriptions Appendix F: Abiotic Parameters for Evaluating Stream Environment Appendix G: Stream Classification Appendix H: HUC12 Watershed Characteristics in Bioregions Appendix I: Index Methodologies Appendix J: Scoring Methodologies Appendix K: Index Performance, Accuracy, and Precision Appendix L: Narrative Ratings and Maps of Index Scores Appendix M: Potential Biases in the Regional Index Ratings Appendix Citations Appendix A: Taxonomic Classification All taxa reported in Chessie BIBI database were assigned the appropriate Phylum, Subphylum, Class, Subclass, Order, Suborder, Family, Subfamily, Tribe, and Genus when applicable. A portion of the taxa reported were reported under an invalid name according to the ITIS database. These taxa were subsequently changed to the taxonomic name deemed valid by ITIS. Table A-1. The taxonomic hierarchy of stream macroinvertebrate taxa included in the Chesapeake Bay non-tidal database. -
Andrew (Andy) Peebles Nimmo 9 December 1938
5 BRAUERIA (Lunz am See, Austria) 43:5-10 (2016) teaching (mostly Chemistry) in evening and summer classes in Edmonton Continuing Education and in schools throughout the Andrew (Andy) Peebles Nimmo city. He is survived by his wife of 12 years, Carita Nybom, daughters Alice (Douglas James) and Emma Nimmo, 9 December 1938 — 14 May 2015 grandchildren Gillian and Thomas Nimmo-James and is warmly remembered by his many friends and colleagues in the On May 14, 2015, with the death of Andy Nimmo, World Trichoptera community and in Edmonton and the Canada lost a prominent student of the Trichoptera. In addition University of Alberta. Andy was a long-time substitute science teacher, bibliographer, Dave Ruiter & Bruce Hemming forester, naturalist and outdoorsman (he fashioned camp fires that would have been visible from the moon with the unaided Curriculum vitae eye), philatelist (he served on the executive committee of the Edmonton Stamp Club for many years), voracious reader, world Marital: Married. 22 June 1968, to Susan Mary Hird, traveler, railway buff (he, twice [1989, 2012] crossed Russia [Discarded by her, 1999]. - Two daughters: Alice Nora, 8 July from Vladivostok to Moscow on the Trans Siberian Railway 1970, Emma Jane, 30 November 1972. - Married, 23 March and worked the summer of 1974 as a machinist’s helper in 2003, to Carita Lynn Elizabeth Nybom, of Helsinki, Finland. Canadian National’s diesel shops in the Calder yards, Edmonton), pipe-smoker (using tobacco he grew himself), and Education: Until November, 1953, I attended school in dour but proud Scot. Bom in Wick, Caithness, in the extreme Scotland, initially the Primary School in Torrance, near northeast of Scotland (his father, David McKay Nimmo, served Glasgow, followed by the West School, Kirkcaldy, Fife. -
DBR Y W OREGON STATE
The Distribution and Biology of the A. 15 Oregon Trichoptera PEE .1l(-.", DBR Y w OREGON STATE Technical Bulletin 134 AGRICULTURAL 11 EXPERIMENTI STATION Oregon State University Corvallis, Oregon INovember 1976 FOREWORD There are four major groups of insectswhoseimmature stages are almost all aquatic: the caddisflies (Trichoptera), the dragonflies and damselflies (Odonata), the mayflies (Ephemeroptera), and the stoneflies (Plecoptera). These groups are conspicuous and important elements in most freshwater habitats. There are about 7,000 described species of caddisflies known from the world, and about 1,200 of these are found in America north of Mexico. All play a significant ro'e in various aquatic ecosystems, some as carnivores and others as consumers of plant tissues. The latter group of species is an important converter of plant to animal biomass. Both groups provide food for fish, not only in larval but in pupal and adult stages as well. Experienced fishermen have long imitated these larvae and adults with a wide variety of flies and other artificial lures. It is not surprising, then, that the caddisflies have been studied in detail in many parts of the world, and Oregon, with its wide variety of aquatic habitats, is no exception. Any significant accumulation of these insects, including their various develop- mental stages (egg, larva, pupa, adult) requires the combined efforts of many people. Some collect, some describe new species or various life stages, and others concentrate on studying and describing the habits of one or more species. Gradually, a body of information accumulates about a group of insects for a particular region, but this information is often widely scattered and much effort is required to synthesize and collate the knowledge. -
Lineage Sorting by Parameres in Limnephilinae Subfamily (Trichoptera): with Description of a New Tribe, New Genera and New Species
Opusc. Zool. Budapest, 2019, 50(Supplementum 1): 03–98 Lineage sorting by parameres in Limnephilinae subfamily (Trichoptera): with description of a new tribe, new genera and new species 1 2 3 4 5 6 J. OLÁH , T. ANDERSEN , S. BESHKOV , A. BILALLI , G. COPPA , H. IBRAHIMI , K.A. 7 8 9 10 11 12 JOHANSON , T. KOVÁCS , W. MEY , M. MUSLIU J. OLÁH JR & A. RUIZ-GARCIA 1János Oláh, Residence postal address: Tarján u. 28, H-4032 Debrecen, Hungary, [email protected] 2Trond Andersen, Department of Natural History, University Museum of Bergen, University of Bergen, P.O. Box 7800, N-5020 Bergen, Norway, [email protected] 3Stoyan Beshkov, National Museum of Natural History, 1 Tsar Osvoboditel Blvd. 1000 Sofia, Bulgaria, [email protected] 4Astrit Bilalli, University of Peja "Haxhi Zeka", Faculty of Agribusiness, “UÇK” street, 30000 Pejë, Republic of Kosovo, [email protected] 5Gennaro Coppa, 1, rue du Courlis, F-08350 Villers-sur-Bar, France, [email protected] 6Halil Ibrahimi, University of Prishtina, Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences, Department of Biology, Mother Teresa p.n., 10000 Prishtina, Kosovo, [email protected] 7Kjell Arne Johanson, Swedish Museum of Natural History, Department of Zoology, Box 50007, SE-10405 Stockholm, Sweden, [email protected] 8Tibor Kovács, Mátra Museum of Hungarian Natural History Museum, Kossuth Lajos u. 40, H-3200 Gyöngyös, Hungary, [email protected] 9Wolfram Mey, Museum für Naturkunde, Humboldt-Universität, Invalidenstr. 43, D-10115 Berlin, Germany, [email protected] 10Milaim Musliu, University of Peja "Haxhi Zeka", Faculty of Agribusiness, “UÇK” street, 30000 Pejë, Republic of Kosovo, [email protected] 11János Oláh jr., Residence postal address: Tarján u. -
Demonstration of Sex Pheromones in Molanna Uniophila (Trichoptera: Molannidae), Platycentropus Radiatus, Pycnopsyche Indiana, and P
View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Valparaiso University The Great Lakes Entomologist Volume 42 Numbers 1 & 2 - Spring/Summer 2009 Numbers Article 5 1 & 2 - Spring/Summer 2009 April 2009 Demonstration of Sex Pheromones in Molanna Uniophila (Trichoptera: Molannidae), Platycentropus Radiatus, Pycnopsyche Indiana, and P. Subfasciata (Trichoptera: Limnephilidae), With an Assessment of Interspecific ttrA action Between Four Sympatric Pycnopsyche Species David C. Houghton Hillsdale College Christine Lux Hillsdale College Megan Spahr Hillsdale College Follow this and additional works at: https://scholar.valpo.edu/tgle Part of the Entomology Commons Recommended Citation Houghton, David C.; Lux, Christine; and Spahr, Megan 2009. "Demonstration of Sex Pheromones in Molanna Uniophila (Trichoptera: Molannidae), Platycentropus Radiatus, Pycnopsyche Indiana, and P. Subfasciata (Trichoptera: Limnephilidae), With an Assessment of Interspecific Attraction Between Four Sympatric Pycnopsyche Species," The Great Lakes Entomologist, vol 42 (1) Available at: https://scholar.valpo.edu/tgle/vol42/iss1/5 This Peer-Review Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Department of Biology at ValpoScholar. It has been accepted for inclusion in The Great Lakes Entomologist by an authorized administrator of ValpoScholar. For more information, please contact a ValpoScholar staff member at [email protected]. Houghton et al.: Demonstration of Sex Pheromones in <i>Molanna Uniophila</i> (Tric 72 THE GREAT LAKES ENTOMOLOGIST Vol. 42, Nos. 1 & 2 Demonstration of Sex Pheromones in Molanna uniophila (Trichoptera: Molannidae), Platycentropus radiatus, Pycnopsyche indiana, and P. subfasciata (Trichoptera: Limnephilidae), with an Assessment of Interspecific Attraction Between Four Sympatric Pycnopsyche Species David C. -
Predator Technical Report
Report DEQ08-LAB-0048-TR PREDATOR: Development and use of RIVPACS-type macroinvertebrate models to assess the biotic condition of wadeable Oregon streams (November 2005 models) By: Shannon Hubler July 2008 Last Update 07/14/2008 DEQ08-LAB-0048-TR Version 1.1 Web pub#: 10-LAB-004 This report prepared by: Oregon Department of Environmental Quality Laboratory and Environmental Assessment Division Watershed Assessment Section 3150 NW 229th, Suite 150, Hillsboro, Oregon 97124 U.S.A. 1-800-452-4011 www.oregon.gov/deq Contact: Shannon Hubler (503) 693-5728 1 List of Tables ...................................................................................................................... 3 List of Figures ..................................................................................................................... 3 Rationale ............................................................................................................................. 4 What is a Predictive Model? ............................................................................................... 4 Why Macroinvertebrates? ................................................................................................... 4 The PREDictive Assessment Tool for Oregon (PREDATOR) .......................................... 5 How does a predictive model differ from a Multi-metric approach? ................................. 5 Developing the Models ....................................................................................................... 5 Macroinvertebrate