Chironomus (Chironomus) bifurcatus Wulker, Martin, Kiknadze, Sublette et Michiels

Chironomus (Chironomus) bifurcatus Wülker, Martin, Kiknadze, Sublette et Michiels (Figs 3 D–F, 4 A–D, 5, 9) Chironomus (Chironomus) bifurcatus Wülker, Martin, Kiknadze, Sublette et Michiels, 2009: 36. Material examined. Lake Winnipeg light traps: 4 km off Grand Rapids, 7 males, 8.vi. 1969; 0.5 km of...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Saether, Ole A.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6169893
https://zenodo.org/record/6169893
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6169893
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
Diptera
Chironomidae
Chironomus
Chironomus bifurcatus
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Insecta
Diptera
Chironomidae
Chironomus
Chironomus bifurcatus
Saether, Ole A.
Chironomus (Chironomus) bifurcatus Wulker, Martin, Kiknadze, Sublette et Michiels
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Insecta
Diptera
Chironomidae
Chironomus
Chironomus bifurcatus
description Chironomus (Chironomus) bifurcatus Wülker, Martin, Kiknadze, Sublette et Michiels (Figs 3 D–F, 4 A–D, 5, 9) Chironomus (Chironomus) bifurcatus Wülker, Martin, Kiknadze, Sublette et Michiels, 2009: 36. Material examined. Lake Winnipeg light traps: 4 km off Grand Rapids, 7 males, 8.vi. 1969; 0.5 km off George Island, 8 males, 12.vii. 1969; 3 km off Grand Rapids, 14 males, 13.vii. 1969; 10 km off (Sturgeonskin point) Long Point, 16 males, 14.vii. 1969; 3 km off McCreary Island, 15 males, 15.vii. 1969; Gull Harbour, 3 males, 16.vii. 1969; Gimli Government Wharf, 2 males, 24.vii. 1969; Victoria Beach, 2 males, 25.vii. 1969; 3 km off George Island, 51 males, 27.vii. 1969; Grand Rapids Government Wharf, 42 males, 28.vii. 1969; 5 km off Selkirk (Horse) Island, 2 males, 29.vii. 1969; Pine Dock, 34 males, 31.vii. & 2.ix. 1969; 3 km off Grand Rapids, 28 males, 4.ix. 12969; 15 km E off Long Point, 2 males, 6.ix. 1969; McBeth Harbour, 2 males, 7.ix. 1969; Beaver Point, 475 males, 9.vi. – 27.viii. 1971; 20 Mile Creek, 14 males, 28.vii. – 1.ix. 1971; Old Fishing Dock, 11563 males, 16.vi. – 18.viii. 1971; Calder's Dock, 8266 males, 9.vi. – 8.ix. 1971; Hecla Island, 1580 males, 27.vii. – 25.viii. 1971. Emergence traps: Beaver Creek, 10 males, 3.vi. – 26.vii. 1971. Rearing specimens: 16 km East Long Point, 1 male, 10.vi. 1969; 24 km SSE Long Point, 2 males, 10.vi. 1969; Saskatchewan River Buoy, 1 male, 13.vii. 1969; NNE of Reindeer Island, 1 male, 15.vii. 1969; NNE of Reindeer Island, 1 male, 27.x. 1969; Centre South basin, 1 male, 31.x. 1969; Outer buoy of Red River, 1 male, 17.iii. 1970; N outer buoy Red River, 17.iii. 1970. South Basin: 281 larvae, 4.vi. – 31.x. 1969; Narrows: 8 larvae, 2.ix. – 12.x. 1969; North Basin, 121 larvae, 1 pupa, 4.vi. – 31.x. 1969. Normal adult males from Lake Winnipeg have an AR of 3.43–4.05, 3.88 (14); 7 –19, 13 (10) sensilla chaetica on p 2; and 7 –18, 13 (10) sensilla chaetica on p 3. The adult females have 88–114, 104 (6) sensilla chaetica on p 2; 94–122, 107 (7) sensilla chaetica on p 3. 21 % of the males caught in light traps are male intersexes with completely female antenna (Saether & Galloway 1980 table 3). Some samples, however, have up to 95 % intersexes. The female genitalia of C. bifurcatus from Lake Winnipeg are illustrated by Saether (1977 fig. 81 F–G). The immatures of C. bifurcatus are illustrated (Figs 3 D–F, 4 A–D). The pupa drawn, with 6–7 filamentous Lsetae on segment VIII, is the only one which has more than 5 filamentous L-setae. The head capsule lengths of different instars is shown in Fig. 9. The species, together with C. entis , completely dominate other Chironomus species in the lake. Remarks. Although the species morphologically appear inseparable from C. decorus Johannsen, Johannsen (1905) notes that “this species is common in... ponds and ditches …”. C. decorus does not occur in lakes, but some of the described members of the C. decorus -group do. Butler et al. (1995) note that C. decorus -group sp. 1, now C. bifurcatus (Wülker et al. 2009), is common in the profundal of North Dakota lakes. Their C. decorus -group sp. 2, while common in lakes from Lake Waskesui to Mississippi, tends to be in shallower areas. Other described members of the C. decorus -group are C. blaylocki Wülker, Martin, Kiknadze, Sublette et Michiels, and the two marine species described by Martin et al . (2010). Comparison of the present material to the description of C. bifurcatus supports show that the present species can be identified as C. bifurcatus . Distribution and ecology. The C. decorus group to which C. bifurcatus belongs is known from all over North America (Townes 1945: 122, Oliver et al. 1990: 42). However, according to Sublette & Sublette (1974) and Martin (2012) several unnnamed species, are included in the records. C. bifurcatus appears in North America to have taken the ecological niche occupied by C. anthracinus in Europe, i.e. it is a character form of the profundal zone of moderately eutrophic lakes (Saether 1975: 3127, 3131). It is found in Quebec, Ontario, Manitoba, Massachusetts, Wisconsin, Michigan, Minnesota and Kansas (Martin 2012). In Lake Winnipeg the species is the dominant Chironomus species in the benthos of the South Basin (Figs 1, 5). Most imagines were caught in the light traps from 1971 (Fig. 5), but these were all set in the Narrows. There apparently are two generations a year. : Published as part of Saether, Ole A., 2012, The Chironomus group (Diptera: Chironomidae) in Lake Winnipeg, Canada, pp. 1-19 in Zootaxa 3275 on pages 5-8, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.280836 : {"references": ["Saether, O. A. & Galloway, T. D. (1980) Sexual anomalies in Chironomini (Chironomidae: Diptera) from Lake Winnipeg, Manitoba. With observations on mermithid (Nematoda) parasites. Acta Universitas Carolinae, 1978, 193 - 211.", "Saether, O. A. (1977) Female genitalia in Chironomidae and other Nematocera: morphology, phylogenies, keys. Bulletin of the Fisheries Research Board of Canada, 197, 1 - 209.", "Johannsen, O. A. (1905) Aquatic nematocerous Diptera. Chironomidae. In: Needham, J. G., Morton, K J. & Johannsen, O. A. (eds.): Mayflies and midges of New York. New York State Museum Bulletins, 86, 76 - 327.", "Butler, M. G., Kiknadze, I. I., Cooper, J. K. & Siirin, M. T. (1995) Cytologically identified Chironomus species from lakes in North Dakota and Minnesota, USA. In: Cranston P. S. (ed.): ' Chironomids, from Gene to Ecosystems', Proceedings of the 12 th International Symposium on Chironomidae, Canberra, January 23 - 26, 1994, CSIRO, Canberra, pp. 31 - 37.", "Wulker, W., Martin, J., Kiknadze. I. I., Sublette, J. E. & Michiels, S. (2009) Chironomus blaylocki n. sp. and C. bifurcatus n. sp., North American species near the base of the decorus-group. Zootaxa, 2023, 28 - 46.", "Martin, J., Sublette, J. E., & Caldwell, B. A. (2010) Description of Chironomus quinnitukqut, n. sp., closely related to the C. decorus group in North America, with characterization of an additional larval form from halobiontic habitats. Zootaxa, 2716, 29 - 41 & 27 43, 68 (2011).", "Townes, H. K. (1945) The Nearctic species of Tendipedini (Diptera: Tendipedidae (= Chironomidae )). American Midland Naturalist, 34, 1 - 206.", "Oliver, D. R., Dillon, M. E. & Cranston, P. S. (1990) A catalog of Nearctic Chironomidae. Research Branch Agriculture Canada Publication, 1857 / B, 89 pp.", "Sublette, J. E. & Sublette, M. F. (1974) A review of the genus Chironomus (Diptera, Chironomidae) V. The maturus - complex. Studies in Natural Sciences, Portales, New Mexico, 1 (8, 9), 1 - 42.", "Martin, J. (2012) North American cytospecies of the genus Chironomus (includes Chaetolabis, Lobochironomus and some Einfeldia (s. l. )). http: // www. genetics. unimelb. edu. au / martin / NACytfiles / NAChiron. html. Accessed 11 March 2012.", "Saether, O. A. 1975. Nearctic chironomids as indicators of lake typology. Verhandlungen der Internationale Vereinigung fur Theoretische und Angewandte Limnologie, 19, 3127 - 3133."]}
format Text
author Saether, Ole A.
author_facet Saether, Ole A.
author_sort Saether, Ole A.
title Chironomus (Chironomus) bifurcatus Wulker, Martin, Kiknadze, Sublette et Michiels
title_short Chironomus (Chironomus) bifurcatus Wulker, Martin, Kiknadze, Sublette et Michiels
title_full Chironomus (Chironomus) bifurcatus Wulker, Martin, Kiknadze, Sublette et Michiels
title_fullStr Chironomus (Chironomus) bifurcatus Wulker, Martin, Kiknadze, Sublette et Michiels
title_full_unstemmed Chironomus (Chironomus) bifurcatus Wulker, Martin, Kiknadze, Sublette et Michiels
title_sort chironomus (chironomus) bifurcatus wulker, martin, kiknadze, sublette et michiels
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2012
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6169893
https://zenodo.org/record/6169893
long_lat ENVELOPE(-108.935,-108.935,55.933,55.933)
ENVELOPE(-61.220,-61.220,-62.697,-62.697)
ENVELOPE(-101.500,-101.500,-72.083,-72.083)
ENVELOPE(8.224,8.224,63.072,63.072)
ENVELOPE(-67.200,-67.200,-67.600,-67.600)
ENVELOPE(-102.501,-102.501,57.434,57.434)
ENVELOPE(-55.331,-55.331,49.533,49.533)
geographic Canada
Dillon
Morton
Caldwell
Midland
The Narrows
Reindeer Island
Long Point
geographic_facet Canada
Dillon
Morton
Caldwell
Midland
The Narrows
Reindeer Island
Long Point
genre Beaver Creek
genre_facet Beaver Creek
op_relation http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFB2544FFF9EFFCFFFE59D2CFFAD1F44
https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit
https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.280836
http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFB2544FFF9EFFCFFFE59D2CFFAD1F44
https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.280839
https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.280845
https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.280837
https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.280841
https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6169892
https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit
op_rights Open Access
Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal
https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode
cc0-1.0
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
op_rightsnorm CC0
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6169893
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.280836
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.280839
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.280845
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.280837
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.280841
https://doi.or
_version_ 1766374066019631104
spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6169893 2023-05-15T15:41:11+02:00 Chironomus (Chironomus) bifurcatus Wulker, Martin, Kiknadze, Sublette et Michiels Saether, Ole A. 2012 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6169893 https://zenodo.org/record/6169893 unknown Zenodo http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFB2544FFF9EFFCFFFE59D2CFFAD1F44 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.280836 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFB2544FFF9EFFCFFFE59D2CFFAD1F44 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.280839 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.280845 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.280837 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.280841 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6169892 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 Diptera Chironomidae Chironomus Chironomus bifurcatus article-journal ScholarlyArticle Taxonomic treatment Text 2012 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6169893 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.280836 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.280839 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.280845 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.280837 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.280841 https://doi.or 2022-04-01T11:22:23Z Chironomus (Chironomus) bifurcatus Wülker, Martin, Kiknadze, Sublette et Michiels (Figs 3 D–F, 4 A–D, 5, 9) Chironomus (Chironomus) bifurcatus Wülker, Martin, Kiknadze, Sublette et Michiels, 2009: 36. Material examined. Lake Winnipeg light traps: 4 km off Grand Rapids, 7 males, 8.vi. 1969; 0.5 km off George Island, 8 males, 12.vii. 1969; 3 km off Grand Rapids, 14 males, 13.vii. 1969; 10 km off (Sturgeonskin point) Long Point, 16 males, 14.vii. 1969; 3 km off McCreary Island, 15 males, 15.vii. 1969; Gull Harbour, 3 males, 16.vii. 1969; Gimli Government Wharf, 2 males, 24.vii. 1969; Victoria Beach, 2 males, 25.vii. 1969; 3 km off George Island, 51 males, 27.vii. 1969; Grand Rapids Government Wharf, 42 males, 28.vii. 1969; 5 km off Selkirk (Horse) Island, 2 males, 29.vii. 1969; Pine Dock, 34 males, 31.vii. & 2.ix. 1969; 3 km off Grand Rapids, 28 males, 4.ix. 12969; 15 km E off Long Point, 2 males, 6.ix. 1969; McBeth Harbour, 2 males, 7.ix. 1969; Beaver Point, 475 males, 9.vi. – 27.viii. 1971; 20 Mile Creek, 14 males, 28.vii. – 1.ix. 1971; Old Fishing Dock, 11563 males, 16.vi. – 18.viii. 1971; Calder's Dock, 8266 males, 9.vi. – 8.ix. 1971; Hecla Island, 1580 males, 27.vii. – 25.viii. 1971. Emergence traps: Beaver Creek, 10 males, 3.vi. – 26.vii. 1971. Rearing specimens: 16 km East Long Point, 1 male, 10.vi. 1969; 24 km SSE Long Point, 2 males, 10.vi. 1969; Saskatchewan River Buoy, 1 male, 13.vii. 1969; NNE of Reindeer Island, 1 male, 15.vii. 1969; NNE of Reindeer Island, 1 male, 27.x. 1969; Centre South basin, 1 male, 31.x. 1969; Outer buoy of Red River, 1 male, 17.iii. 1970; N outer buoy Red River, 17.iii. 1970. South Basin: 281 larvae, 4.vi. – 31.x. 1969; Narrows: 8 larvae, 2.ix. – 12.x. 1969; North Basin, 121 larvae, 1 pupa, 4.vi. – 31.x. 1969. Normal adult males from Lake Winnipeg have an AR of 3.43–4.05, 3.88 (14); 7 –19, 13 (10) sensilla chaetica on p 2; and 7 –18, 13 (10) sensilla chaetica on p 3. The adult females have 88–114, 104 (6) sensilla chaetica on p 2; 94–122, 107 (7) sensilla chaetica on p 3. 21 % of the males caught in light traps are male intersexes with completely female antenna (Saether & Galloway 1980 table 3). Some samples, however, have up to 95 % intersexes. The female genitalia of C. bifurcatus from Lake Winnipeg are illustrated by Saether (1977 fig. 81 F–G). The immatures of C. bifurcatus are illustrated (Figs 3 D–F, 4 A–D). The pupa drawn, with 6–7 filamentous Lsetae on segment VIII, is the only one which has more than 5 filamentous L-setae. The head capsule lengths of different instars is shown in Fig. 9. The species, together with C. entis , completely dominate other Chironomus species in the lake. Remarks. Although the species morphologically appear inseparable from C. decorus Johannsen, Johannsen (1905) notes that “this species is common in... ponds and ditches …”. C. decorus does not occur in lakes, but some of the described members of the C. decorus -group do. Butler et al. (1995) note that C. decorus -group sp. 1, now C. bifurcatus (Wülker et al. 2009), is common in the profundal of North Dakota lakes. Their C. decorus -group sp. 2, while common in lakes from Lake Waskesui to Mississippi, tends to be in shallower areas. Other described members of the C. decorus -group are C. blaylocki Wülker, Martin, Kiknadze, Sublette et Michiels, and the two marine species described by Martin et al . (2010). Comparison of the present material to the description of C. bifurcatus supports show that the present species can be identified as C. bifurcatus . Distribution and ecology. The C. decorus group to which C. bifurcatus belongs is known from all over North America (Townes 1945: 122, Oliver et al. 1990: 42). However, according to Sublette & Sublette (1974) and Martin (2012) several unnnamed species, are included in the records. C. bifurcatus appears in North America to have taken the ecological niche occupied by C. anthracinus in Europe, i.e. it is a character form of the profundal zone of moderately eutrophic lakes (Saether 1975: 3127, 3131). It is found in Quebec, Ontario, Manitoba, Massachusetts, Wisconsin, Michigan, Minnesota and Kansas (Martin 2012). In Lake Winnipeg the species is the dominant Chironomus species in the benthos of the South Basin (Figs 1, 5). Most imagines were caught in the light traps from 1971 (Fig. 5), but these were all set in the Narrows. There apparently are two generations a year. : Published as part of Saether, Ole A., 2012, The Chironomus group (Diptera: Chironomidae) in Lake Winnipeg, Canada, pp. 1-19 in Zootaxa 3275 on pages 5-8, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.280836 : {"references": ["Saether, O. A. & Galloway, T. D. (1980) Sexual anomalies in Chironomini (Chironomidae: Diptera) from Lake Winnipeg, Manitoba. With observations on mermithid (Nematoda) parasites. Acta Universitas Carolinae, 1978, 193 - 211.", "Saether, O. A. (1977) Female genitalia in Chironomidae and other Nematocera: morphology, phylogenies, keys. Bulletin of the Fisheries Research Board of Canada, 197, 1 - 209.", "Johannsen, O. A. (1905) Aquatic nematocerous Diptera. Chironomidae. In: Needham, J. G., Morton, K J. & Johannsen, O. A. (eds.): Mayflies and midges of New York. New York State Museum Bulletins, 86, 76 - 327.", "Butler, M. G., Kiknadze, I. I., Cooper, J. K. & Siirin, M. T. (1995) Cytologically identified Chironomus species from lakes in North Dakota and Minnesota, USA. In: Cranston P. S. (ed.): ' Chironomids, from Gene to Ecosystems', Proceedings of the 12 th International Symposium on Chironomidae, Canberra, January 23 - 26, 1994, CSIRO, Canberra, pp. 31 - 37.", "Wulker, W., Martin, J., Kiknadze. I. I., Sublette, J. E. & Michiels, S. (2009) Chironomus blaylocki n. sp. and C. bifurcatus n. sp., North American species near the base of the decorus-group. Zootaxa, 2023, 28 - 46.", "Martin, J., Sublette, J. E., & Caldwell, B. A. (2010) Description of Chironomus quinnitukqut, n. sp., closely related to the C. decorus group in North America, with characterization of an additional larval form from halobiontic habitats. Zootaxa, 2716, 29 - 41 & 27 43, 68 (2011).", "Townes, H. K. (1945) The Nearctic species of Tendipedini (Diptera: Tendipedidae (= Chironomidae )). American Midland Naturalist, 34, 1 - 206.", "Oliver, D. R., Dillon, M. E. & Cranston, P. S. (1990) A catalog of Nearctic Chironomidae. Research Branch Agriculture Canada Publication, 1857 / B, 89 pp.", "Sublette, J. E. & Sublette, M. F. (1974) A review of the genus Chironomus (Diptera, Chironomidae) V. The maturus - complex. Studies in Natural Sciences, Portales, New Mexico, 1 (8, 9), 1 - 42.", "Martin, J. (2012) North American cytospecies of the genus Chironomus (includes Chaetolabis, Lobochironomus and some Einfeldia (s. l. )). http: // www. genetics. unimelb. edu. au / martin / NACytfiles / NAChiron. html. Accessed 11 March 2012.", "Saether, O. A. 1975. Nearctic chironomids as indicators of lake typology. Verhandlungen der Internationale Vereinigung fur Theoretische und Angewandte Limnologie, 19, 3127 - 3133."]} Text Beaver Creek DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Canada Dillon ENVELOPE(-108.935,-108.935,55.933,55.933) Morton ENVELOPE(-61.220,-61.220,-62.697,-62.697) Caldwell ENVELOPE(-101.500,-101.500,-72.083,-72.083) Midland ENVELOPE(8.224,8.224,63.072,63.072) The Narrows ENVELOPE(-67.200,-67.200,-67.600,-67.600) Reindeer Island ENVELOPE(-102.501,-102.501,57.434,57.434) Long Point ENVELOPE(-55.331,-55.331,49.533,49.533)