Daphniidae Straus, 1820
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4044.4.2 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:769D2D8D-B599-4418-A52B-C0684C7501A9 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6095721 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A0E632-CE46-F72F-D7BD-BE2026A1FBC1 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Daphniidae Straus, 1820 |
status |
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Family Daphniidae Straus, 1820
12. Ceriodaphnia cornuta Sars, 1885 s .lat. Recorded by Camargo-Fajardo (1994); Barón-Rodríguez et al. (2006); Guevara et al. (2008); Gallo-Sánchez et al. (2009); Álvarez (2010); Villabona-González et al. (2011); Aranguren et al. (2011); Fuentes-Reinés et al. (2012, fig 7); Fuentes-Reinés (2014a). Ceriodaphnia cornuta s.str. is a valid species described from Australia ( Sars 1885). It was regarded as a tropicopolitan taxon ( Smirnov et al. 1995), but now it is clear that the cornuta-rigaudi group is a large complex of cryptic species ( Elías-Gutiérrez et al. 2008a; Sharma & Kotov 2013). In Colombia, it occurs in the Amazon, Andean and Caribbean regions.
Ceriodaphnia rigaudi Richard, 1894 View in CoL . Recorded by Camargo-Fajardo (1994) and Villabona-González et al. (2011). Considered a species inquirendum ( Kotov et al. 2013a). There are several taxa of the cornuta View in CoL -group in the Neotropics ( Elías-Gutiérrez et al. 2008a), but the continental endemism is characteristic of the cornuta View in CoL -group ( Sharma & Kotov 2013), and the name of a taxon described from SE Asia ( C. rigaudi View in CoL ) could not be applied to any Neotropical species.
13. Ceriodaphnia dubia Richard, 1894 s View in CoL .lat. Recorded by Stingelin (1913, fig. 12) and Gaviria (1993a, 2001). C. dubia View in CoL s.str. is a valid species described from Indonesia ( Richard 1894). This taxon is regarded as cosmopolitan ( Berner 1987; Flössner 1972, 2000; Smirnov et al. 1995), but it needs to be revised worldwide. In Colombia, it occurs in the Andean region.
14. Ceriodaphnia quadrangula ( O.F. Müller, 1785) View in CoL . Recorded by Stingelin (1913); Gaviria (2001) and Aranguren et al. (2011). Cosmopolitan ( Smirnov et al. 1995; Kotov et al. 2013a). In Colombia, it occurs in the Andean region.
15. Ceriodaphnia reticulata (Jurine, 1820) View in CoL . Recorded by Stingelin (1913, fig 13); Camargo-Fajardo (1994); Gaviria (2001). It is considered cosmopolitan excluding Australia ( Smirnov et al. 1995), and a revision of this group is only started ( Berner & Rakhmatullaeva 2001). In Colombia, it occurs in the Amazon, Andean and Caribbean regions.
Ceriodaphnia reticulata View in CoL var. dubia forma silvestrii Daday View in CoL in Stingelin (1913). See C. silvestrii View in CoL .
16. Ceriodaphnia silvestrii Daday, 1902 View in CoL *. Recorded by Fuentes-Reinés & Elmoor-Loureiro (unpublished data), it is a new record for Colombia. Neotropical species ( Kotov et al. 2013a). In Colombia, it occurs in the Caribbean region.
17. Ceriodaphnia pulchella (Sars, 1882) View in CoL s.lat. Recorded by Monroy et al. (2004, fig 4.3). Valid species described from the Palearctic region ( Smirnov et al. 1995). Nevertheless, there were some records from Brazil ( Elmoor-Loureiro 1998) and Argentina ( Olivier 1962; Paggi 1986). In Colombia, it occurs in the Andean region. Populations from the Neotropics need to be revised.
18. Daphnia (Daphnia) ambigua Scourfield, 1947 View in CoL . Recorded by Gaviria (2001) and Aranguren-Riaño et al. (2011). Valid species, distributed throughout the Americas ( Adamowicz et al. 2004) and has also been introduced to Europe ( Benzie 2005). In Colombia, it occurs in the Andean region.
19. Daphnia (Daphnia) galeata Sars, 1863 s View in CoL .lat. Recorded by Stingelin (1913, figs 9-11). Daphnia galeata View in CoL s.str. is a Palearctic species ( Benzie 2005), but it has been also recorded in the Nearctic region (Herbert et al. 1993). It is important to note that just a galeata View in CoL -like taxon is represented in Stingelin's (1913) figures of D. galeata View in CoL forma obtusifrons Sars, not mis-identified D. laevis View in CoL . Similar forms are sometimes recorded in the Neotropics ( Smirnov et al. 1995; Elías-Gutiérrez et al. 1999; Gaviria-Melo et al. 2005; Valdivia & Zambrano 1989). Species from the Neotropics should be revised. In Colombia, it occurs in the Andean region.
20. Daphnia (Daphnia) laevis Birge, 1879 View in CoL . Recorded by Gaviria (1984, 1993a, 1993b, 2001). It represents a group of cryptic species ( Taylor et al. 1998; Elías-Gutiérrez et al. 2008b). This taxon has been reported from North and South America and Africa ( Paggi 1977; Adamowicz et al. 2004; Benzie 2005). In Colombia, it occurs in the Andean region.
Daphnia longispina galeata View in CoL forma obtusifrons Sars, 1890 in Stingelin (1913). This name of "form" is applied by Stingelin (1913) to some Neotropical populations improperly, because the former was described from Norway ( Sars 1890). See D. galeata View in CoL section.
21. Daphnia (Ctenodaphnia) magna Straus, 1820 View in CoL . Recorded by Gaviria (2001). Distributed in ‘‘Holarctic and Africa’’ ( Benzie 2005; Kotov et al. 2013a). It is presumably an introduced species in South America ( Gaviria-Melo et al. 2005). In Colombia, it occurs in the Caribbean region.
22. Daphnia (Daphnia) obtusa Kurz, 1875 s View in CoL .lat. Recorded by Stingelin (1913, figs 7-8) and Gaviria (2001). Nearly cosmopolitan complex ( Benzie 2005; Kotov et al. 2013a). In Colombia, it occurs in the Andean region. There are many clades of the obtusa View in CoL -like taxa in South America ( Adamowicz et al. 2004; Kotov & Taylor 2010), and they need to be revised.
23. Daphnia (Daphnia) pulex Leydig, 1860 s View in CoL .lat. Recorded by Gaviria (2001); Monroy et al. (2004, fig 4.2) and Aranguren et al. (2011). This species can be confused with Daphnia pulicaria Forbes, 1893 View in CoL with which it frequently hybridizes at least in case of the Palaearctic populations, but these two taxa can be differentiated by the cell shapes of the rostrum, which are more elongated in D. pulicaria View in CoL than in D. pulex ( Benzie, 2005) View in CoL . Unfortunately this character was not shown by Monroy et al. (2004), therefore, the presence of D. pulex View in CoL in Colombia should be confirmed. Some records of D. pulex View in CoL in South America could refer to D. pulicaria View in CoL s.lat. ( Adamowicz et al. 2004). Daphnia pulex View in CoL s.str. is distributed on every continent except Australia and Antarctica ( Crease et al. 2012). In Colombia, it occurs in the Andean region.
Daphnia pulex View in CoL var. obtusa forma latipalpa Moniez, 1888 in Stingelin (1913). Dubious determination keeping in mind that this taxon was described from the Azores ( Portugal) ( Moniez 1888).
24. Scapholeberis armata Herrick, 1882. Recorded by Barón-Rodríguez et al. (2006). Nearctic species ( Kotov et al. 2013a). In Colombia, it occurs in the Andean region.
25. Scapholeberis mucronata ( O. F. Müller, 1776) s.lat. Recorded by Álvarez (2010). It prefers the Palaearctic and Nearctic areas, but it has been also reported from the Neotropical region ( Kotov et al. 2013a). In Colombia, it occurs in the Caribbean region.
26. Simocephalus acutirostratus King, 1853 s View in CoL .lat. Recorded by Álvarez (2010). This species occurs in the Australasian, Oriental and Palearctic regions (Orlova-Bienkoswkaja 2001; Kotov et al. 2013a). Similar species has been reported from Venezuela (Zoppi de Roa & Vasquez 1991, fig 4) and Brazil ( Elmoor-Loureiro 1997, fig 45). Neotropical S. acutirostratus View in CoL needs a revision ( Orlova-Bienkowskaja 2001). In Colombia, it occurs in the Caribbean region.
27. Simocephalus View in CoL cf. brehmi Gauthier, 1939 *. New record for Colombia. It is found in Ciénaga de Gamboa- Sucre, Colombia. Reported from Brazil and Venezuela as S. acutirostratus View in CoL ( Brehm 1937, 1938; Zoppi de Roa & Vasquez 1991, fig 4; Elmoor-Loureiro 1997, fig 45). Álvarez (2010) recorded S. acutirostratus View in CoL in the Córdoba Department-Colombia and likely meant the same taxon, nevertheless no description or illustrations were represented. Specimens from the Ciénaga de Gamboa Sucre-Colombia are identical to those reported by Van Damme & Dumont (2010, fig 3) from Lençóis Maranhenses ( Brazil) and do not fit neither S. acutirostratus View in CoL (from N. America), nor S. brehmi View in CoL (from Africa). Characters that distinguish them are: 1) an acute proximal angle on the postabdomen (like S. brehmi View in CoL ); (2) a distal marginal tooth on the postabdomen less than half its length from the postabdominal claw (unlike S. brehmi View in CoL ); 3) a very shallow to absent depression above and below posterior valve prominence (like in S. acutirostratus View in CoL ), armed with long spines; 4) an elongated, sharp rostrum; (5) a relatively large eye and ocellus (like S. acutirostratus View in CoL ). This species is different from S. acutirostratus View in CoL and could be a new for science (Van Damme & Dumont 2010).
28. Simocephalus exspinosus (Koch, 1841) View in CoL s.lat. Recorded by Villabona-González et al. (2011). Almost cosmopolitan taxon ( Orlova-Bienkowskaja 2001). In the Neotropics, there is a series of species in this group (Elías-Gutiérrez et al. 2008a-b), and some populations could belong to earlier described S. iheringi View in CoL , see below. In Colombia, it occurs in the Caribbean region.
29. Simocephalus iheringi Richard, 1897 View in CoL . Recorded by Stingelin (1913). Neotropical species ( Kotov et al. 2013a) which needs to be redescribed. In Colombia, it has been reported from the Andean region. A preliminary analysis of its morphology suggests independent status of this taxon instead of to be a junior synonym of S. daphnoides Herrick, 1883 View in CoL as it was accepted previously ( Orlova-Bienkowskaja 2001; Kotov et al., 2013a).
30. Simocephalus latirostris Stingelin, 1906 View in CoL . Recorded by Barón-Rodríguez et al. (2006); Álvarez (2010) and Fuentes-Reinés et al. (2012, fig 6). Neotropical species ( Orlova-Bienkowskaja 2001). In Colombia, it has been reported from the Andean and Caribbean regions.
31. Simocephalus serrulatus (Koch, 1841) View in CoL s.lat. Recorded by Stingelin (1913); Gaviria (1984, 1993b) and Fuentes-Reinés & Zoppi de Roa (2013). Cosmopolitan group (Orlova-Bienkoswkaja 2001; Kotov et al. 2013a), but it definitively consists of several species (Jefferey et al. 2011). In Colombia, it has been reported from the Andean and Caribbean regions.
32. Simocephalus vetuloides Sars, 1898 View in CoL . Recorded by Fuentes-Reinés & Zoppi de Roa (2013). Widely distributed species (Orlova-Bienkoswkaja 2001). In Colombia, it occurs in the Caribbean region.
Simocephalus vetulus ( O.F. Müller, 1776) View in CoL in Stingelin (1913). Dubious record. S. vetulus View in CoL s.str. seems to be a Palaearctic taxon (Orlova-Bienkoswkaja 2001; Huang et al. 2014).
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Genus |
Daphniidae Straus, 1820
Kotov, Alexey A. & Fuentes-Reinés, Juan M. 2015 |
D. pulex (
Benzie 2005 |
Daphnia (Daphnia) ambigua
Scourfield 1947 |
Simocephalus
Gauthier 1939 |
Simocephalus latirostris
Stingelin 1906 |
Ceriodaphnia silvestrii
Daday 1902 |
Simocephalus vetuloides
Sars 1898 |
Simocephalus iheringi
Richard 1897 |
Ceriodaphnia rigaudi
Richard 1894 |
Ceriodaphnia dubia
Richard 1894 |
Daphnia pulicaria
Forbes 1893 |
S. daphnoides
Herrick 1883 |
Ceriodaphnia pulchella
Sars 1882 |
Daphnia (Daphnia) laevis
Birge 1879 |
Daphnia (Daphnia) obtusa
Kurz 1875 |
Daphnia (Daphnia) galeata
Sars 1863 |
Daphnia (Daphnia) pulex
Leydig 1860 |
Simocephalus acutirostratus
King 1853 |
Simocephalus exspinosus
Koch 1841 |
Simocephalus serrulatus
Koch 1841 |
Ceriodaphnia reticulata
Jurine 1820 |
Daphnia (Ctenodaphnia) magna
Straus 1820 |
Ceriodaphnia quadrangula ( O .F. Müller, 1785)
O.F. Muller 1785 |
Simocephalus vetulus ( O .F. Müller, 1776)
O.F. Muller 1776 |