Careospina hespera sierramaestrae (Kluge, 1994)
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.5170691 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:A4EC11F3-CEF9-4AC9-B221-5F8FD03EA391 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5185080 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/465687EC-AA68-FFD8-B0D3-B0EAFC4DF41E |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Careospina hespera sierramaestrae (Kluge, 1994) |
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A.20b. Careospina hespera sierramaestrae (Kluge, 1994)
Figures 10 View Figures 10–13 , 46 View Figures 41–46 , 52 View Figures 47–52 .
Hagenulus (Careospina) hespera sierramaestrae Kluge 1994:274 (male and female imagos, nymph).
Holotype. Male imago, Province Santiago de Cuba, Arroyo Paco ( Río Palma Mocha ), 25-II-1989, N. Kluge.
This subspecies was described from the Sierra Maestra based on morphological variations. Kluge (1994) separated C. hespera sierramaestrae from C. hespera hespera because the male eyes of C. hespera sierramaestrae are contiguous and those of C. hespera hespera are slightly separated. The tarsi of the nymphal legs of C. hespera sierramaestrae are darker than the tibiae and the hind tibiae are strongly flattened; these characters are the opposite of C. hespera hespera where the tarsi are paler than the tibiae and the hind tibiae are slightly flattened. The undescribed species of Careospina mentioned by Peters (1971) from various localities in Oriente is this subspecies.
Ecology. In collections made by researchers on aquatic fauna at the Universidad de Oriente, this was one of the most abundant species at high and low elevations. About 75% of the specimens were collected from rapids and 25% from backwaters, showing a preference for lotic streams with sandy bottoms. It has been collected up to 1750 m, although it is encountered most frequently at altitudes below 500 m. The nymphs were collected throughout the year, so it is supposed that the adults can emerge at any time of the year.
Geographic distribution. These subspecies can also be distinguished by their separate geographic ranges ( Fig. 10 View Figures 10–13 ). Careospina hespera sierramaestrae is reported only from the Eastern Region where it is abundant and the Central-East Region ( Benítez 2007), while C. hespera hespera is recorded in the Western and Central Regions, especially in Sierra de los Órganos (abundant) and the mountain massif of Topes de Collantes (Kluge 1994, Naranjo and González-Lazo 2005c). According to Naranjo (1986), C. hespera sierramaestrae is homogenously distributed in the rivers of the Sierra Maestra at a low density. It has been recorded from 21 localities in the Eastern Region.
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Careospina hespera sierramaestrae (Kluge, 1994)
L, Carlos Naranjo, Peters, Janice G., del, Pedro López & Castillo 2019 |
Hagenulus (Careospina) hespera sierramaestrae
Kluge 1994: 274 |