Boreochlus Edwards, 1938
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5511.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:8DDA1158-1904-4097-A04F-DB9EC7D22812 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/794387C7-FFA0-161E-FF40-7094ED80F916 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Boreochlus Edwards, 1938 |
status |
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Boreochlus Edwards, 1938 View in CoL
Two species of Boreochlus have been recorded in Alaska. Boreochlus gracilistylus Brundin, 1966 was first recorded from Alaska by Wirth & Sublette (1970). Specimens were collected in a net attached to a jeep (car-top insect trap or car-top trap) traveling along Highway 1 between Kenai Lake and Anchorage in September 1964 and 1965 ( Sommerman & Simmet 1965). We collected B. gracilistylus near a seepage area next to Ebner Falls on Gold Creek in Juneau, Alaska. Boreochlus persimilis ( Johannsen, 1926) was first recorded from Alaska by Wirth & Sublette (1970) from car-top trap material collected by Sommerman & Simmet (1965) along Highway 1 between Anchorage and Palmer, Alaska, in September 1964. We collected B. persimilis in seeps and first-order streams in Southeast Alaska and moss from a stream on Unalaska Island in Southwestern Alaska. Collection sites in Southeast Alaska included seeps near Margaret Bay on Revillagigedo Island, near Hanus Bay on Catherine Island, at Turner Lake near Juneau ( Fig. 9A View FIGURE 9 ), a first-order stream near Lena Point in Juneau, and near the lower Bartlett River in Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve ( Fig. 9B View FIGURE 9 ). LaSage et al. (2005) reported Boreochlus larvae from eleven headwater streams in the Maybeso Creek and Harris River watershed on Prince of Wales Island. We found a Boreochlus larva in Little Rabbit Creek in Anchorage.
The larval habitats of Boreochlus in the southeastern U.S.A. include moss or leaf packs in seepage areas, rivulets, and small streams ( Hudson et al. 1990). In Alaska, we found larvae inhabit mats of algae.
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