Nyctiophylax Brauer

Oláh, János & Johanson, Kjell Arne, 2010, Generic review of Polycentropodidae with description of 32 new species and 19 new species records from the Oriental, Australian and Afrotropical Biogeographical Regions 2435, Zootaxa 2435 (1), pp. 1-63 : 40-41

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.2435.1.1

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0393CE26-FFD9-FFD4-7CFB-8ED6FC76FCE2

treatment provided by

Felipe (2021-08-22 22:29:46, last updated by Plazi 2023-11-04 10:29:53)

scientific name

Nyctiophylax Brauer
status

 

Nyctiophylax Brauer View in CoL

Nyctiophylax Brauer, 1865: 419 View in CoL .

Type species: Nyctiophylax sinensis Brauer , monotypic.

Nyctiophylacodes Ulmer, 1912: 172 , new synonym.

Type species: Nyctiophylacodes curtula Ulmer , monotypic. Diagnosis: Ulmer (1912) described Nyctiophylacodes from Baltic Amber and stated that it was separate from Nyctiophylax by having a unique hind wing venation: (1) Subcosta (Sc) with a short fork; (2) a large discoidal cell; and (3) Radius (R1) ending in discoidal cell. However, there are several extant species in Nyctiophylax with large hind wing discoidal cell and a Radius ending in the discoidal cell. Frequently, especially in species with subcosta being hypertrophied and/or the Radius ending in the discoidal cell, there is a poorly discernible short fork at the end of the subcosta in the pterostigmal area.

The spur formula is 3,4,4. Maxillary palps each have 2 basal segments subequal in size and much shorter than segment 3; and their 3rd segment originates nearly at the apex on the lateral face of segment 2. The discoidal cell in each forewing and hind wing is closed, and the forewing median cell is closed. There are some species with open median cells in the forewings in the subgenus Nyctiophylax (Paranyctiophylax) , i.e. N. (P.) rhamphodes Neboiss 1994 , N. (P.) traunensis Neboiss 1994 and N. (P.) synorius Neboiss 1994 . The forewings each have apical forks 2, 3, 4, and 5 present, and the hind wings each have apical forks 2 and 5 present. The gonopods are mostly slender and/or bilobed, seldom robust.

Neboiss (1993) re-defined the genera Nyctiophylax and Paranyctiophylax Tsuda, 1942 and transferred all Nyctiophylax species with looped anal veins in the forewings to the genus Paranyctiophylax . Paranyctiophylax was lowered to subgeneric status by Malicky (1994). The genus Nyctiophylax is well represented in Baltic Amber, and distributed in all faunal regions.

Brauer, F. (1865) Zweiter Bericht uber auf der Weltfahrt der kais. Fregatte Nevara gesammelten Neuropteren. Verhandlungen der Kaiserlich-koniglichen Zoologischen-Botanischen Gesellschaft in Wien, 15, 415 - 422.

Malicky, H. (1994) Neue Trichopteren aus Nepal, Vietnam, China, von den Philippinen und Bismarck-Archipel (Trichoptera). Entomologische Berichte Luzern, 31, 163 - 172.

Neboiss, A. (1993) Revised definitions of the genera Nyctiophylax Brauer and Paranyctiophylax Tsuda (Trichoptera: Polycentropodidae). In: Otto, C. (Ed.) Proceedings of the 7 th International Symposium on Trichoptera. Backhuys Publishers, Leiden, the Netherlands, p. 107 - 111.

Neboiss, A. (1994) A review of the genus Paranyctiophylax Tsuda from Sulawesi, Papua New Guinea and Northern Australia (Trichoptera: Polycentropodidae). Memoirs of the Museum of Victoria, 54, 191 - 205.

Tsuda, M. (1942) Japanische Trichopteren, I. Systematik. Memoirs of the College of Science, Kyoto Imperial University B, 17, 239 - 339.

Ulmer, G. (1912) Die Trichopteren des baltischen Bersteins. Beitrage zur Naturkunde Preussens herausgegeben von den physikalisch-okonomischen Gesellschaft zu Konigsberg, 10, 1 - 380.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Trichoptera

Family

Polycentropodidae