Rhyacophila species
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5023.1.2 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:F6CB0172-C3B9-4E9F-ACBF-2BC006F588F5 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03CF878F-4F24-FFF4-68A8-1F5EFE18FA00 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Rhyacophila species |
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Rhyacophila species in Yakushima Island
Rhyacophila nigrocephala View in CoL and two unidentified species (R. sp. 1 and R. sp. 2) had been found on the island previously ( Kuhara & Ito 2017). In this study, four new species (including clarification for the two unidentified species), and two newly recorded species are added and bring the present total to seven species of this genus for the island. This is the highest species number of Rhyacophila species for any island in the Ryukyu Archipelago, since zero to four species of the genus are known for each of other islands ( Ito 2017a).
All new species are apparently endemic to Yakushima ( Figs 6A–6D View FIGURE 6 ), and three of them, R. yakushima , R. arakawa , and R. nagata , have related species on the main islands of Japan and/or continental Asia. The remaining new species, R. miyanoura , is related to species on the main islands of Japan and species found in the more southern area, central Ryukyu of Japan. Two previously named species, Rhyacophila brevicephala View in CoL and R. nigrocephala View in CoL ( Figs 6E, 6F View FIGURE 6 ), are common on the main islands of Japan, and Yakushima is their southernmost distribution area ( Taira & Nozaki 2021). Rhyacophila shikotsuensis View in CoL ( Fig. 6G View FIGURE 6 ) is found on Yakushima and from Hokkaido to Taiwan via the Ryukyu Archipelago ( Taira & Nozaki 2021). Therefore, the high number of Rhyacophila species on Yakushima might be due in part to the location of the island, which is closer to the main islands of Japan, where 60 Rhyacophila species are known ( Taira & Nozaki 2021; Torii & Kobayashi 2021), than are the other islands of the Ryukyu Archipelago ( Fig. 1A View FIGURE 1 ). This diversity and the phylogenetic relationships of the island’s Rhyacophila species also reflect its position near the boundary between the East Palearctic and Oriental biogeographic regions ( Ito 2017b).
A small number of adults of Rhyacophila brevicephala and R. nigrocephala were collected from a few sites lower than 100 m a.s.l. ( Figs 6E, 6F View FIGURE 6 ). On the main islands of Japan these species live in the lower reaches of rivers, often with broad riverbeds ( Hattori 2005), and therefore suitable habitats may be scarce on mountainous Yakushima. Two adults of Rhyacophila shikotsuensis were collected at 240 m and 1200 m a.s.l. sites ( Fig. 6G View FIGURE 6 ), but their habitat preference was not apparent in the present study, since the collecting efforts were infrequent during their adult flight season, early winter. In contrast, many adults of the four new species were collected at a wide range of elevations, from 20 m to 1400 m a.s.l., and were relatively abundant in the upper reaches ( Figs 6A–6D View FIGURE 6 ), suggesting that they may prefer relatively narrow, shallow, and fast-flowing streams in forests and might be supported by the nature of the mountains of Yakushima. The mountainous environment of the island may be another reason for the high species number of Rhyacophila in Yakushima, since mountains higher than 1000 m a.s.l. are absent elsewhere in the Ryukyu Archipelago ( Tachihara 2003).
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Rhyacophila species
Ito, Tomiko 2021 |
R. yakushima
Ito 2021 |
R. arakawa
Ito 2021 |
R. nagata
Ito 2021 |
R. miyanoura
Ito 2021 |
Rhyacophila nigrocephala
Iwata 1927 |
Rhyacophila brevicephala
Iwata 1927 |
R. nigrocephala
Iwata 1927 |
Rhyacophila shikotsuensis
Iwata 1927 |