Cratyna (Cratyna) uliginosa (Lengersdorf, 1929)
publication ID |
https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.957.46528 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:ECBF8EDB-7096-4563-991A-526901CC53B9 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/87D22FEA-995B-5E92-B54E-CBE73079C7D9 |
treatment provided by |
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scientific name |
Cratyna (Cratyna) uliginosa (Lengersdorf, 1929) |
status |
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Cratyna (Cratyna) uliginosa (Lengersdorf, 1929) View in CoL
Literature.
Faunistics: Thunes et al. (2004): 72, 85 [as Cratyna uliginosa ]; Heller et al. (2016): 100 [as Cratyna (Cratyna) uliginosa ]. Taxonomy: Tuomikoski (1960): 32, 33 [as Plastosciara (Decembrina) uliginosa ]; Menzel and Mohrig (1998): 363; Menzel and Mohrig (2000): 277; Heller et al. (2016): 98 [all as Cratyna (Cratyna) uliginosa ].
Localities.
• Akershus; Asker, Sem NW of Asker, Tangen Peninsula at the E side of Semsvannet (= 'Asker, Sem, Tangen’) • Aust-Agder; Birkenes, Birkeland, Nordåsen. Lillesand, Lillesand, Furulia • Buskerud; Sigdal, Heimseteråsen (= ‘Sigdal’) • Finnmark; Sør-Varanger, Neiden • Hedmark; Elverum, Starmoen naturreservat SE of Elverum (= 'Starrmoen NR’) • Stor-Elvdal, N of Krokmyra, at a cabin E of Fåfengtjørna (= 'N Krokmyra - Ved hytta, E Fåfengtjørna’) • Hordaland; Bergen, Bergen, Fløyen mountain, mountain top Fløyfjellet (= Bergen, Fløyfjellet) • Stord, NE coast of Stord Island, SW part of Hageberg SE of Vistvik (= 'Hageberg SV - SE of Vistvik, NE coast of Stord’) • Møre Og Romsdal; Ørskog, Nysætra, near the Nysætervatnet NE of Sjøholt (= ‘Nysætra - NE of Sjøholt, near Nysætervatnet’) • Sogn Og Fjordane; Jølster, Hamarsvika, Jølstravatnet NE of Vassenden (= 'Hamarsvika - NE of Vassenden, Jølstravatnet’) • Vestfold; Larvik, Farmenrøysa mountain NE of Kvelde (= 'Larvik, Farmenrøysa Ø’ [correctly: ‘Farmenrøysa, east-facing slope’]) • Larvik, hill Småås N of Larvik (= 'Larvik, Småås’) • Larvik, Nevlungstranda W of Nevlunghavn, beach Mølen (= ‘Mølen’) • Re, Revetal, Våle.
Ecological note.
On sandy beaches and hillsides; east- and south-facing mountain slopes with damp meadows (downy birch, dwarf birch, scots pines, blueberry, rushes, sedges, mosses) and deadwood-rich mixed forests (grey alder, downy birch, rowan, Norway spruce); swampy old spruce forests; in the damp ground vegetation (blueberry, ferns, grasses, mosses) with small springs; Pinus sylvestris dominated boreal forests with Betula pubescens and Picea abies . Phenology: May-Sep.
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.