Peltoperlidae

The Peltoperlidae, also known as roach-like stoneflies or roachflies, are a family of stoneflies.

Peltoperlidae
Soliperla sierra
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Plecoptera
Superfamily: Pteronarcyoidea
Family: Peltoperlidae
Claassen 1931[1]

The family Peltoperlidae comprises 11 genera and 46 known species.[2] Species are semivoltine, meaning their lifecycles last 1 to 2 years. Adults of the family usually emerge in late spring or early summer, April through June. Larvae are flattened and brown in color, and they are roach-like in appearance because of the expanded thoracic plates covering the bases of their legs, heads, and abdomens.[3] Tapering gills occur on the thorax at the bases of the legs. These tracheal gills are multifunctional and key to many biological processes. No dense tufts or branching gills are found on their thoraces or abdomens, unlike other Plecoptera families. The larvae also possess broad, chisel-like mandibles. Adults have two ocelli in addition to its two compound eyes. Male epiprocts are sclerotized and rod-like in shape, and both genders lack cross-veins in the anal lobe of the forewings.[4]

Peltoperlidae are generally lotic erosional and depositional. These habitats are flowing streams marked by sediments, vascular plants, and detritus. Roach-like stoneflies are generally found in leaf litter and debris piles trapped in either riffles or pools.

This family is considered to be clingers-sprawlers; they attach to surface in erosional habitats or rest loosely on the top surfaces of substrates, respectively. The body of this stonefly is flattened and streamlined to aid in minimizing water resistance in a flowing stream.

The Peltoperlidae are classified as in the feeding group shredders-detritivores. They chew and mine through leaf litter in their habitats. They are a significant contributor to leaf breakdown in streams. This family is very sensitive to disturbances in environmental conditions. They are intolerant to loss of coarse particulate organic matter for food and habitat. Given this low tolerance, Peltoperlids make potential bioindicators.[5]

Genera

These 10 genera belong to the family Peltoperlidae:[6][7]

  • Cryptoperla Needham, 1909
  • Microperla Chu, 1928
  • Peltoperla Needham, 1905
  • Peltoperlopsis Illies, 1966
  • Peltopteryx Stark, 1989
  • Sierraperla Jewett, 1954
  • Soliperla Ricker, 1952
  • Tallaperla Stark & Stewart, 1981
  • Viehoperla Ricker, 1952
  • Yoraperla Ricker, 1952
gollark: http://strangehorizons.com/non-fiction/articles/installing-linux-on-a-dead-badger-users-notes/
gollark: Yes, it is.
gollark: Oh, oops, I didn't see you mentioning that.
gollark: <@350812024055398401> There's a FOSS Emby fork.
gollark: Virtualize everything which you can virtualize with virtualization.

References

  1. Plecoptera of North America, "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2010-06-14. Retrieved 2009-04-26.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. Fochetti, R., & de Figueroa, J. M. T. (2008). Global diversity of stoneflies (Plecoptera; Insecta) in freshwater. Hydrobiologia, 595(1), 365-377
  3. J. R. Voshell (2002). A Guide to Common Freshwater Invertebrates of North America. McDonald and Woodward, Blacksburg, Virginia. ISBN 0-93992-387-4.
  4. Stark, Bill P, & Stewart, Kenneth W (1981). The Nearctic Genera of Pertoperlidae (Plecoptera). Journal of the Kansas Entomological Society. Vol 54: 285-311.
  5. Qin, Chun-Yan et al (2014). Quantitative tolerance values for common stream benthic microinvertebrates in the Yangtze River Delta, Eastern China. Environ Monit Assess. Vol 186: 5883-5895.
  6. DeWalt, R.E.; Maehr, M.D.; Neu-Becker, U.; Stueber, G. (2019). "family Peltoperlidae". Plecoptera species file online, Version 5.0. Retrieved 2019-06-10.
  7. "Peltoperlidae". GBIF. Retrieved 2018-04-28.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.