Nemoura arctica Esben-Petersen 1910

Nemoura arctica Esben-Petersen, 1910 Arctic Forestfly (Figs. 1–52) http://lsid.speciesfile.org/urn:lsid: Plecoptera.speciesfile.org: TaxonName:6232 Nemoura arctica Esben-Petersen 1910:85. Holotype ♂, Type locality – Karasjok, Norway Nemoura trispinosa Claassen 1923:289. Holotype ♂,...

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Main Authors: Grubbs, Scott A., Baumann, Richard W., Burton, David K.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2018
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4763862
https://zenodo.org/record/4763862
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.4763862
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
topic Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Insecta
Plecoptera
Nemouridae
Nemoura
Nemoura arctica
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Insecta
Plecoptera
Nemouridae
Nemoura
Nemoura arctica
Grubbs, Scott A.
Baumann, Richard W.
Burton, David K.
Nemoura arctica Esben-Petersen 1910
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Insecta
Plecoptera
Nemouridae
Nemoura
Nemoura arctica
description Nemoura arctica Esben-Petersen, 1910 Arctic Forestfly (Figs. 1–52) http://lsid.speciesfile.org/urn:lsid: Plecoptera.speciesfile.org: TaxonName:6232 Nemoura arctica Esben-Petersen 1910:85. Holotype ♂, Type locality – Karasjok, Norway Nemoura trispinosa Claassen 1923:289. Holotype ♂, Type locality – Mud Creek, Tompkins Co., New York. New synonym (Holotype ♂ examined) Nemoura trispinosa : Needham & Claassen 1925:213. Nemoura arctica : Claassen 1940:50. Nemoura trispinosa : Claassen 1940:64. Nemoura trispinosa : Frison 1942:261 Nemoura arctica : Koponen & Brinck 1949:7. Nemoura trispinosa : Weber 1950:175. Nemoura arctica : Brinck 1952:107. Nemoura trispinosa : Harden & Mickel 1952:19. Nemoura ( Nemoura ) arctica : Ricker 1952:36. Nemoura arctica : Zhiltzova 1964:187. Nemoura arctica : Illies 1966:194. Nemoura trispinosa : Illies 1966:214. Nemoura arctica : Lillehammer 1972a:163. Nemoura trispinosa : Lillehammer 1972a:163. Nemoura arctica : Zwick 1973a:332. Nemoura trispinosa : Zwick 1973a:342. Nemoura arctica : Lillehammer 1974a:82. Nemoura arctica : Baumann 1975:21. Nemoura trispinosa : Baumann 1975:21. Nemoura arctica : Baumann et al. 1977:34. Nemoura arctica : Lillehammer 1988:113. Nemoura arctica : Zhiltzova 2003:266. Nemoura arctica : Kondratieff & Baumann 2004:114. Nemoura arctica : Stewart & Oswood 2006:78. Nemoura arctica : Judson & Nelson 2012:33. Distribution. Canada: AB, BC, LB, MB, NB, NS, NT, NU, ON, PE, PQ, YK. Europe: Baltic States, Finland, Norway, Sweden. Mongolia. Russia East, Russia North, West Siberia. USA: AK, IA, IL, ME, MI, NY, OH, PA, SD, WI, WY (DeWalt et al. 2018). New Canadian province and USA state records. Canada, Saskatchewan, stream at Promontory Campground, 15 miles north of La Rouge, junction Hwy 102, 21-VI-1976, L.M. Dosdall, 4♂, 2♀; Puskwakau River, Hwy 106, 30-V-1976, L.M. Dosdall, 1♂. USA, Minnesota (Harden & Mickel 1952, their pp. 19–20). New Hampshire, Coös Co., Lakes of the Clouds, White Mountains, 20 June 1951, C.P. Alexander, 1♂ (USNM); Grafton Co., Franconia, A. T. Slosson, no date information, 1♂ (USNM; Ac #26226). West Virginia , Tucker Co., Abe Run, Canaan Valley State Park, 28 May 1993, S.M. Clark, 1♀ (BYU). Diagnosis . Cercus . Highly variable. Adults of N. arctica and N. trispinosa have been previously differentiated by a combination of cercal characteristics (males) and body size and distribution (females) (Ricker 1952). Male cerci are sclerotized laterally and terminate typically in a pair of appressed spines that vary in length and degree of tapering (Figs. 1–16), plus a third unit that is highly variable and has been used for the past ca. 65 years to separate males of N. arctica and N. trispinosa (Ricker 1952). Lillehammer (1972a) later illustrated cerci as either lacking ( N. arctica , his Fig. 4b) or possessing a distinct ( N. trispinosa , his Fig. 4a) spine. Ricker’s (1952, p. 36) key to N. trispinosa males focused on “…the outer edge of the cercus produced into a slender acute spine… may be forked once or twice at the tip”. This feature is common in North America and shown here clearly for populations from Iowa (Fig. 1), Illinois (Fig. 2), Ohio (Fig. 3), Wisconsin (Fig. 4), South Dakota (Fig. 5), Wyoming (Fig. 6), and New Brunswick (Fig. 8), and also from Siberia (Fig. 12), Norway (Fig. 13) and Mongolia (Fig. 16). The spine, however, varies in width and degree of tapering, For example, males from South Dakota have an outer spine that is rectangular, not “slender”, and crenulated distally (Fig. 5). Nemoura arctica was separated out by Ricker (1952) as the “…outer edge of the cercus bordered by a crenulate shelf or ridge”. No form of a spine is evident for populations studied from North America from Saskatchewan (Fig. 7), Manitoba (Fig. 9), and the Northwest Territories (Figs. 10–11) plus Norway (Fig. 14) and Mongolia (Fig. 15). Overall, there is sufficient variability (e.g. forked vs. crenulated; tapered or not) to strongly suggest that the male cercus does not provide objective, diagnostic information to support N. trispinosa as distinct from N. arctica . Epiproct . Males exhibit consistency with epiproct shape and characteristics across the Holarctic with only minor differences between individuals. In lateral aspect, the basal cushion occupies the anterior ca. ½ and is separated from the dorsal sclerite by smooth lateral areas (Figs. 17–24). The lateral areas vary in thickness but are consistently recurved slightly over the distal medial portion of the basal cushion. The dorsal sclerite appears scaly at high magnifications, especially at the distal tips (Figs. 41–52). The dorsal sclerite is open apically, exposing parallel, broad, hatchet-like apical prongs of the ventral sclerite (Figs. 25–40) and prominent, scaly, apical prongs positioned ca. perpendicular to the ridges (Figs. 41–52). The prongs terminate laterally bearing two short, thick, grooved spines (e.g. Figs. 42, 45, 49, 52). Comments. Nemoura trispinosa is placed in synonymy with N. arctica due to consistencies in epiproct characteristics across the Holarctic, particularly the paired apical prongs of the ventral sclerite (Figs. 41–52). In contrast, cercal spine characteristics are highly variable and do not provide objective, diagnostic information. Even males from the same geographic entity (e.g. Mongolia, Figs. 15–16) exhibit different cercal forms. Lillehammer (1972a, his Fig. 25.4) previously illustrated several different cercal forms from Norway. Geographic notes . Holarctic: Scandinavia east across Asia; east to Alaska, Yukon, Northwest Territories and Nunavut. South in Europe to Latvia and in far eastern Asia to Mongolia and Siberia. South in North America to Wyoming and South Dakota east across the Great Lakes region to Atlantic Canada, with relictual southern populations in Ohio, Pennsylvania, and West Virginia. Additional notable references include Ricker (1944, 1964), Brinck (1958), Ulfstrand (1969), Jewett (1971), Lillehammer (1974, 1985, 1986, 1988), Harper (1973), Flannagan & Flannagan (1982), Burton (1984), Stewart et al. (1990), Harper & Ricker (1994), Stewart & Ricker (1997), Huntsman et al. (1999), Teslenko & Bazova (2009), Walters et al. (2009), Zhou et al. (2010), Boumans (2011), Boumans & Brittain (2012), Surenkhorloo et al. (2012), Dosdall & Giberson (2014), Kendrick & Huryn (2014), and Potikha (2015). : Published as part of Grubbs, Scott A., Baumann, Richard W. & Burton, David K., 2018, Nearctic Nemoura Trispinosa Claassen, 1923 And N. Rickeri Jewett, 1971 Are Junior Synonyms Of Holarctic Nemoura Species (Plecoptera: Nemouridae), pp. 44-64 in Illiesia 14 (3) on pages 48-52, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.4761204 : {"references": ["Esben-Petersen, P. 1910. Bidrag til en fortegnelse over arktisk. Norges Neuropterfauna. II. Tromso Museums Arshefter, 31 / 32: 75 - 89.", "Claassen, P. W. 1923. New species of North American Plecoptera, Part II. The Canadian Entomologist, 55: 281 - 292.", "Needham, J. H. & P. W. Claassen. 1925. A monograph of the Plecoptera or stoneflies of America north of Mexico. Thomas Say Foundation, Entomological Society of America, 2: 1 - 397.", "Claassen, P. W. 1940. A catalogue of the Plecoptera of the world. Cornell University Experimental Station Memoir, 232: 1 - 235.", "Frison, T. H. 1942. Studies of North American Plecoptera with special reference to the fauna of Illinois. Illinois Natural History Survey Bulletin, 22: 235 - 355.", "Koponen, J. S. & P. Brinck. 1949. Neue oder wenig bekannte Plecoptera. Annales Entomologici Fennicae, 15: 1 - 21.", "Weber, N. A. 1950. A survey of the insects and related arthropods of Arctic Alaska, Part I. Transactions of the American Entomological Society, 76: 147 - 206. http: // www. jstor. org / stable / 25077616", "Brinck, P. 1952. Backslandor, Plecoptera. Svensk Insektfauna, 15: 1 - 126.", "Harden, P. H. & C. E. Mickel. 1952. The stoneflies of Minnesota (Plecoptera). University of Minnesota Technical Bulletin, 201: 1 - 84.", "Ricker, W. E. 1952. Systematic Studies in Plecoptera. Indiana University Publications Series, 18: 1 - 200. http: // www. nativefishlab. net / library / textpdf / 16", "Zhiltzova, L. A. 1964. Order Plecoptera (Stoneflies). Pages 177 - 200. In: Bei-Bienko (editor). Opredelitel' nasekomykh Evropeiskoi chasti SSSR (Identification Guide to Insects of the European Part of the USSR), Moscow, Leningrad.", "Illies, J. 1966. Katalog der rezenten Plecoptera. Das Tierreich. 82. Walter de Gruyter, Berlin. 631 pp.", "Lillehammer, A. 1972 a. A new species of the genus Nemoura (Plecoptera) from Finnmark, North Norway. Norsk Entomologisk Tidsskrift, 19: 161 - 163. http: // www. entomologi. no / journals / nje / old / V 19", "Zwick, P. 1973 a. Insecta: Plecoptera. Phylogenetisches System und Katalog. Das Tierreich 94. Walter de Gruyter, Berlin. 465 pp.", "Lillehammer, A. 1974 a. Norwegian stoneflies. I. Analysis of the variations in morphological and structural characters used in taxonomy. Norsk Entomologisk Tidsskrift, 21: 59 - 107.", "Baumann, R. W. 1975. Revision of the stonefly family Nemouridae (Plecoptera): a study of the", "Baumann, R. W., A. R. Gaufin, & R. E. Surdick. 1977. The stoneflies (Plecoptera) of the Rocky Mountains. Memoirs of the American Entomological Society, 31: 1 - 207.", "Lillehammer, A. 1988. Stoneflies (Plecoptera) of Fennoscandia and Denmark. Fauna Entomologica Scandinavica, Volume 21. E. J. Brill / Scandinavian Science Press, New York. 165 pp.", "Zhiltzova, L. A. 2003. Fauna of Russia and Neighboring Countries, Vol. 1, Issue 1, Insecta Plecoptera, Plecoptera Gruppe Euoholognatha, NAUKA, St. Petersburg, 537 pp.", "Kondratieff, B. C. & R. W. Baumann. 2004. A record of the Arctic Forestfly, Nemoura arctica (Plecoptera: Nemouridae), from the contiguous United States. Entomological News, 115: 113 - 115.", "Stewart, K. W. & M. W. Oswood. 2006. The stoneflies (Plecoptera) of Alaska and western Canada. Caddis Press, Columbus, Ohio. 325 pp.", "Judson, S. W. & C. R. Nelson. 2012. A guide to Mongolian stoneflies (Insecta: Plecoptera). Zootaxa, 3541: 1 - 118.", "DeWalt, R. E., M. D. Maehr, U. Neu-Becker & G. Stueber. 2018. Plecoptera Species File Online. Version 5.0 / 5.0. Accessed 1 March 2018. http: // Plecoptera. SpeciesFile. org", "Ricker, W. E. 1944. Some Plecoptera from the far north. The Canadian Entomologist, 76: 174 - 185. https: // doi. org / 10.4039 / Ent 76174 - 9", "Ricker, W. E. 1964. Distribution of Canadian stoneflies. Gewasser und Abwasser, 34 / 35: 50 - 71.", "Brinck, P. 1958. On some stoneflies recorded from Nowaya Zemlya. Norske videnskaps-akademi, Matematisk-naturvidenskapelig klasse, 2: 1 - 11.", "Ulfstrand, S. 1969. Ephemeroptera and Plecoptera from the river Vindelalven in Swedish Lapland. Entomologisk Tidskrift, 90: 145 - 165.", "Jewett, S. G. 1971. Some Alaskan stoneflies (Plecoptera). The Pan-Pacific Entomologist, 47: 189 - 192.", "Harper, P. P. 1973. Life histories of Nemouridae and Leuctridae in southern Ontario (Plecoptera). Hydrobiologia, 41: 309 - 356.", "Flannagan, P. M. & J. E Flannagan. 1982. Present distribution and the post-glacial origin of the Ephemeroptera, Plecoptera, and Trichoptera of Manitoba. Manitoba Department of Natural Resources and Fisheries Technical Report 82: 1 - 79.", "Burton, D. K. 1984. Distribution of Manitoba stoneflies (Plecoptera). Proceedings of the Entomological Society of Manitoba, 40: 39 - 51.", "Stewart, K. W., R. L. Hassage, S. J. Holder, & M. W. Oswood. 1990. Life cycles of six stonefly species (Plecoptera) in subarctic and arctic Alaska streams. Annals of the Entomological Society of America, 83: 207 - 214.", "Harper, P. P. & W. E. Ricker. 1994. Distribution of Ontario stoneflies (Plecoptera). Proceedings of the Entomological Society of Ontario, 125: 43 - 66.", "Stewart, K. W. & W. E. Ricker. 1997. Stoneflies (Plecoptera) of the Yukon. Pages 201 - 222. In: Danks, H. V. & J. A. Downes (editors). Insects of the Yukon. Biological Survey of Canada (Terrestrial Arthropods), Ottawa. http: // www. biology. ualberta. ca / bsc / pdf / stewart.", "Huntsman, B. O., R. W. Baumann, & B. C. Kondratieff 1999. Stoneflies (Plecoptera) of the Black Hills of South Dakota and Wyoming, USA: distribution and zoogeographic affinities. Great Basin Naturalist, 59: 1 - 17.", "Teslenko, V. & N. Bazova. 2009. On the stonefly (Plecoptera) fauna of the transfrontier Selenga River basin. Entomological Review, 89: 1059 - 1068.", "Walters, K. R., T, Sformo, B. M. Barnes, J. G. & Duman. 2009. Freeze tolerance in an arctic Alaska stonefly. Journal of Experimental Biology, 212: 305 - 312.", "Zhou, X., L. M. Jacobus, R. E. DeWalt, S. J. Adamowicz, & P. D. N. Hebert. 2010. Ephemeroptera, Plecoptera, and Trichoptera fauna of Churchill (Manitoba, Canada): insights into biodiversity patterns from DNA barcoding. Journal of the North American Benthological Society, 29, 814 - 837. https: // doi. org / 10.1899 / 09 - 121.1", "Boumans, L. 2011. The Plecoptera collection at the Natural History Museum in Oslo. Illiesia, 7: 280 - 290.", "Boumans, L. & J. E. Brittain. 2012. Faunistics of stoneflies (Plecoptera) in Finnmark, northern Norway, including DNA barcoding of Nemouridae. Norwegian Journal of Entomology, 59: 196 - 215.", "Surenkhorloo, P., R. Samiya, J. Slowik, & M. Muhlenberg. 2012. Some taxonomic records of aquatic insects in the Eroo River Basin (West Khentii, Northern Mongolia). Erforschung biologischer Ressourcen der Mongolei, 12: 245 - 249.", "Dosdall, L. M. & D. J. Giberson. 2014. Stoneflies (Plecoptera) of the Canadian Prairie Provinces. Pages 201 - 229. In: Carcamo, H. A. & D. J. Giberson (editors). Arthropods of Canadian Grasslands (Volume 3): Biodiversity and Systematics Part 1. Biological Survey of Canada, Ottawa. doi / 10.3752 / 9780968932162. ch 7", "Kendrick, M. R. & A. D. Huryn. 2014. The Plecoptera and Trichoptera of the Arctic North Slope of Alaska. Western North American Naturalist 74: 275 - 285. https: // doi. org / 10.3398 / 064.074.0303", "Potikha, E. V. 2015. A taxonomic list of the mayflies, stoneflies and caddisflies (Insecta: Ephemeroptera, Plecoptera and Trichoptera) of the Sikhote-Alin Biosphere Reserve. Achievements in the Life Sciences, 9: 22 - 31. https: // ac. els-cdn. com / S 2078152015000346 / 1 -"]}
format Text
author Grubbs, Scott A.
Baumann, Richard W.
Burton, David K.
author_facet Grubbs, Scott A.
Baumann, Richard W.
Burton, David K.
author_sort Grubbs, Scott A.
title Nemoura arctica Esben-Petersen 1910
title_short Nemoura arctica Esben-Petersen 1910
title_full Nemoura arctica Esben-Petersen 1910
title_fullStr Nemoura arctica Esben-Petersen 1910
title_full_unstemmed Nemoura arctica Esben-Petersen 1910
title_sort nemoura arctica esben-petersen 1910
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2018
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4763862
https://zenodo.org/record/4763862
long_lat ENVELOPE(16.546,16.546,68.801,68.801)
ENVELOPE(166.733,166.733,-72.550,-72.550)
ENVELOPE(-101.250,-101.250,-71.917,-71.917)
ENVELOPE(-57.050,-57.050,-84.050,-84.050)
ENVELOPE(25.519,25.519,69.472,69.472)
ENVELOPE(-138.838,-138.838,63.466,63.466)
ENVELOPE(-156.667,-156.667,-86.367,-86.367)
ENVELOPE(-71.500,-71.500,-77.467,-77.467)
geographic Arctic
Nunavut
Yukon
Northwest Territories
Canada
Pacific
Norway
Tromso
Burton
Petersen
Harper
Karasjok
Black Hills
Kendrick
Hassage
geographic_facet Arctic
Nunavut
Yukon
Northwest Territories
Canada
Pacific
Norway
Tromso
Burton
Petersen
Harper
Karasjok
Black Hills
Kendrick
Hassage
genre Arctic
Arktis*
Churchill
Fennoscandia
Finnmark
Karasjok
North Norway
north slope
Northern Norway
Northwest Territories
Nunavut
Subarctic
Tromso
Tromso
Alaska
Finnmark
Lapland
Siberia
Yukon
genre_facet Arctic
Arktis*
Churchill
Fennoscandia
Finnmark
Karasjok
North Norway
north slope
Northern Norway
Northwest Territories
Nunavut
Subarctic
Tromso
Tromso
Alaska
Finnmark
Lapland
Siberia
Yukon
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.4763862 2023-05-15T15:17:02+02:00 Nemoura arctica Esben-Petersen 1910 Grubbs, Scott A. Baumann, Richard W. Burton, David K. 2018 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4763862 https://zenodo.org/record/4763862 unknown Zenodo http://publication.plazi.org/id/FF994F6EFFFDAF00FF8DFFEF22272F0F http://zoobank.org/66C4E575-ABF5-4B81-9132-0D771B52D68 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4761204 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FF994F6EFFFDAF00FF8DFFEF22272F0F https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4761206 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4761208 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4761210 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4761214 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4761216 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4761218 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4761220 http://zoobank.org/66C4E575-ABF5-4B81-9132-0D771B52D68 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4763863 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit Open Access Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode cc0-1.0 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess CC0 Biodiversity Taxonomy Animalia Arthropoda Insecta Plecoptera Nemouridae Nemoura Nemoura arctica article-journal ScholarlyArticle Text Taxonomic treatment 2018 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4763862 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4761204 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4761206 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4761208 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4761210 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4761214 https://d 2022-03-10T10:52:57Z Nemoura arctica Esben-Petersen, 1910 Arctic Forestfly (Figs. 1–52) http://lsid.speciesfile.org/urn:lsid: Plecoptera.speciesfile.org: TaxonName:6232 Nemoura arctica Esben-Petersen 1910:85. Holotype ♂, Type locality – Karasjok, Norway Nemoura trispinosa Claassen 1923:289. Holotype ♂, Type locality – Mud Creek, Tompkins Co., New York. New synonym (Holotype ♂ examined) Nemoura trispinosa : Needham & Claassen 1925:213. Nemoura arctica : Claassen 1940:50. Nemoura trispinosa : Claassen 1940:64. Nemoura trispinosa : Frison 1942:261 Nemoura arctica : Koponen & Brinck 1949:7. Nemoura trispinosa : Weber 1950:175. Nemoura arctica : Brinck 1952:107. Nemoura trispinosa : Harden & Mickel 1952:19. Nemoura ( Nemoura ) arctica : Ricker 1952:36. Nemoura arctica : Zhiltzova 1964:187. Nemoura arctica : Illies 1966:194. Nemoura trispinosa : Illies 1966:214. Nemoura arctica : Lillehammer 1972a:163. Nemoura trispinosa : Lillehammer 1972a:163. Nemoura arctica : Zwick 1973a:332. Nemoura trispinosa : Zwick 1973a:342. Nemoura arctica : Lillehammer 1974a:82. Nemoura arctica : Baumann 1975:21. Nemoura trispinosa : Baumann 1975:21. Nemoura arctica : Baumann et al. 1977:34. Nemoura arctica : Lillehammer 1988:113. Nemoura arctica : Zhiltzova 2003:266. Nemoura arctica : Kondratieff & Baumann 2004:114. Nemoura arctica : Stewart & Oswood 2006:78. Nemoura arctica : Judson & Nelson 2012:33. Distribution. Canada: AB, BC, LB, MB, NB, NS, NT, NU, ON, PE, PQ, YK. Europe: Baltic States, Finland, Norway, Sweden. Mongolia. Russia East, Russia North, West Siberia. USA: AK, IA, IL, ME, MI, NY, OH, PA, SD, WI, WY (DeWalt et al. 2018). New Canadian province and USA state records. Canada, Saskatchewan, stream at Promontory Campground, 15 miles north of La Rouge, junction Hwy 102, 21-VI-1976, L.M. Dosdall, 4♂, 2♀; Puskwakau River, Hwy 106, 30-V-1976, L.M. Dosdall, 1♂. USA, Minnesota (Harden & Mickel 1952, their pp. 19–20). New Hampshire, Coös Co., Lakes of the Clouds, White Mountains, 20 June 1951, C.P. Alexander, 1♂ (USNM); Grafton Co., Franconia, A. T. Slosson, no date information, 1♂ (USNM; Ac #26226). West Virginia , Tucker Co., Abe Run, Canaan Valley State Park, 28 May 1993, S.M. Clark, 1♀ (BYU). Diagnosis . Cercus . Highly variable. Adults of N. arctica and N. trispinosa have been previously differentiated by a combination of cercal characteristics (males) and body size and distribution (females) (Ricker 1952). Male cerci are sclerotized laterally and terminate typically in a pair of appressed spines that vary in length and degree of tapering (Figs. 1–16), plus a third unit that is highly variable and has been used for the past ca. 65 years to separate males of N. arctica and N. trispinosa (Ricker 1952). Lillehammer (1972a) later illustrated cerci as either lacking ( N. arctica , his Fig. 4b) or possessing a distinct ( N. trispinosa , his Fig. 4a) spine. Ricker’s (1952, p. 36) key to N. trispinosa males focused on “…the outer edge of the cercus produced into a slender acute spine… may be forked once or twice at the tip”. This feature is common in North America and shown here clearly for populations from Iowa (Fig. 1), Illinois (Fig. 2), Ohio (Fig. 3), Wisconsin (Fig. 4), South Dakota (Fig. 5), Wyoming (Fig. 6), and New Brunswick (Fig. 8), and also from Siberia (Fig. 12), Norway (Fig. 13) and Mongolia (Fig. 16). The spine, however, varies in width and degree of tapering, For example, males from South Dakota have an outer spine that is rectangular, not “slender”, and crenulated distally (Fig. 5). Nemoura arctica was separated out by Ricker (1952) as the “…outer edge of the cercus bordered by a crenulate shelf or ridge”. No form of a spine is evident for populations studied from North America from Saskatchewan (Fig. 7), Manitoba (Fig. 9), and the Northwest Territories (Figs. 10–11) plus Norway (Fig. 14) and Mongolia (Fig. 15). Overall, there is sufficient variability (e.g. forked vs. crenulated; tapered or not) to strongly suggest that the male cercus does not provide objective, diagnostic information to support N. trispinosa as distinct from N. arctica . Epiproct . Males exhibit consistency with epiproct shape and characteristics across the Holarctic with only minor differences between individuals. In lateral aspect, the basal cushion occupies the anterior ca. ½ and is separated from the dorsal sclerite by smooth lateral areas (Figs. 17–24). The lateral areas vary in thickness but are consistently recurved slightly over the distal medial portion of the basal cushion. The dorsal sclerite appears scaly at high magnifications, especially at the distal tips (Figs. 41–52). The dorsal sclerite is open apically, exposing parallel, broad, hatchet-like apical prongs of the ventral sclerite (Figs. 25–40) and prominent, scaly, apical prongs positioned ca. perpendicular to the ridges (Figs. 41–52). The prongs terminate laterally bearing two short, thick, grooved spines (e.g. Figs. 42, 45, 49, 52). Comments. Nemoura trispinosa is placed in synonymy with N. arctica due to consistencies in epiproct characteristics across the Holarctic, particularly the paired apical prongs of the ventral sclerite (Figs. 41–52). In contrast, cercal spine characteristics are highly variable and do not provide objective, diagnostic information. Even males from the same geographic entity (e.g. Mongolia, Figs. 15–16) exhibit different cercal forms. Lillehammer (1972a, his Fig. 25.4) previously illustrated several different cercal forms from Norway. Geographic notes . Holarctic: Scandinavia east across Asia; east to Alaska, Yukon, Northwest Territories and Nunavut. South in Europe to Latvia and in far eastern Asia to Mongolia and Siberia. South in North America to Wyoming and South Dakota east across the Great Lakes region to Atlantic Canada, with relictual southern populations in Ohio, Pennsylvania, and West Virginia. Additional notable references include Ricker (1944, 1964), Brinck (1958), Ulfstrand (1969), Jewett (1971), Lillehammer (1974, 1985, 1986, 1988), Harper (1973), Flannagan & Flannagan (1982), Burton (1984), Stewart et al. (1990), Harper & Ricker (1994), Stewart & Ricker (1997), Huntsman et al. (1999), Teslenko & Bazova (2009), Walters et al. (2009), Zhou et al. (2010), Boumans (2011), Boumans & Brittain (2012), Surenkhorloo et al. (2012), Dosdall & Giberson (2014), Kendrick & Huryn (2014), and Potikha (2015). : Published as part of Grubbs, Scott A., Baumann, Richard W. & Burton, David K., 2018, Nearctic Nemoura Trispinosa Claassen, 1923 And N. Rickeri Jewett, 1971 Are Junior Synonyms Of Holarctic Nemoura Species (Plecoptera: Nemouridae), pp. 44-64 in Illiesia 14 (3) on pages 48-52, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.4761204 : {"references": ["Esben-Petersen, P. 1910. Bidrag til en fortegnelse over arktisk. Norges Neuropterfauna. II. Tromso Museums Arshefter, 31 / 32: 75 - 89.", "Claassen, P. W. 1923. New species of North American Plecoptera, Part II. The Canadian Entomologist, 55: 281 - 292.", "Needham, J. H. & P. W. Claassen. 1925. A monograph of the Plecoptera or stoneflies of America north of Mexico. Thomas Say Foundation, Entomological Society of America, 2: 1 - 397.", "Claassen, P. W. 1940. A catalogue of the Plecoptera of the world. Cornell University Experimental Station Memoir, 232: 1 - 235.", "Frison, T. H. 1942. Studies of North American Plecoptera with special reference to the fauna of Illinois. Illinois Natural History Survey Bulletin, 22: 235 - 355.", "Koponen, J. S. & P. Brinck. 1949. Neue oder wenig bekannte Plecoptera. 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Achievements in the Life Sciences, 9: 22 - 31. https: // ac. els-cdn. com / S 2078152015000346 / 1 -"]} Text Arctic Arktis* Churchill Fennoscandia Finnmark Karasjok North Norway north slope Northern Norway Northwest Territories Nunavut Subarctic Tromso Tromso Alaska Finnmark Lapland Siberia Yukon DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Arctic Nunavut Yukon Northwest Territories Canada Pacific Norway Tromso ENVELOPE(16.546,16.546,68.801,68.801) Burton ENVELOPE(166.733,166.733,-72.550,-72.550) Petersen ENVELOPE(-101.250,-101.250,-71.917,-71.917) Harper ENVELOPE(-57.050,-57.050,-84.050,-84.050) Karasjok ENVELOPE(25.519,25.519,69.472,69.472) Black Hills ENVELOPE(-138.838,-138.838,63.466,63.466) Kendrick ENVELOPE(-156.667,-156.667,-86.367,-86.367) Hassage ENVELOPE(-71.500,-71.500,-77.467,-77.467)