Goera japonica Banks 1906

Goera japonica Banks 1906 Fig. 1 Goera japonica Banks 1906, 108– 109, male; Tsuda and Akagi 1955, 235– 236, larva, case; Chihara 1956, 81– 82, pupa; Tsuda and Akagi 1962, 140, larva, case; Kobayashi 1971, 35– 36, male, female; Tani 1977, 205, male; Kobayashi 1984, 20, male, female; Tanida 1985, 197,...

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Main Authors: Nozaki, Takao, Tanida, Kazumi
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Published: Zenodo 2006
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6258227
https://zenodo.org/record/6258227
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6258227
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
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language unknown
topic Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Insecta
Trichoptera
Goeridae
Goera
Goera japonica
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Insecta
Trichoptera
Goeridae
Goera
Goera japonica
Nozaki, Takao
Tanida, Kazumi
Goera japonica Banks 1906
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Insecta
Trichoptera
Goeridae
Goera
Goera japonica
description Goera japonica Banks 1906 Fig. 1 Goera japonica Banks 1906, 108– 109, male; Tsuda and Akagi 1955, 235– 236, larva, case; Chihara 1956, 81– 82, pupa; Tsuda and Akagi 1962, 140, larva, case; Kobayashi 1971, 35– 36, male, female; Tani 1977, 205, male; Kobayashi 1984, 20, male, female; Tanida 1985, 197, larva, case. Goera nipponensis Navás 1933, 107– 108, male, female. Syn. nov. Adult. Body, wings, antennae yellowish brown. Head short; ocelli absent; anterior setal warts round in female, absent in male; posterior setal warts large and oval. Antennae 8–11 mm long; scape ca. 1.5 mm long, with long setae. In male maxillary palpi, distal segment oval, membranous and elastic with long setae on outer surface and brown scale lope on mesal surface; apical tube-like lobe bearing many black scales is housed in the mesal surface, expanded one very long. Male abdominal sternite VI with 9–19 long spines in comb-like arrangement, central one usually longest and broad but number, length and shape variable; sternite V with several small spines. Female abdominal sternite VI with 6–20 small spines, sternite V usually bears several tiny spines. Male genitalia. Segment IX long, oblique in lateral aspect; ventromesal lobe long, about 5 times as long as wide in ventral aspect. Dorsal process of tergum X absent. Paired ventrolateral processes of tergum X long, strongly sclerotized, branched in apical third, each branch acute. Preanal appendages long, about 2 / 3 as long as ventrolateral processes. Inferior appendages large; basal segment elongate, oblique, large; distal segment distinct, bearing long dorsal lobe with rounded apex, mesal process strongly sclerotized with acute apex directed laterad. Phallus simple, tubular, dorsum of apical half membranous, phallic apodema triangular in lateral aspect. Female genitalia. Tergum X bilobed, each 2 times as long as wide, apices triangular in lateral aspect. Supragenital plate long, relatively acute in ventral aspect. Lamellae slightly bilobed, rounded apically. Gonopod plate about as long as wide; apicomesal process trapezoid. Spermathecal sclerite slender with paired lateral lip in ventral aspect, bearing rectangular box anteriorly. Larva. Larval stage has been described by Tsuda and Akagi (1955) and Tanida (1985). Specimens examined. Hokkaido: 1 male, 3 females, Nishifuren-gawa, Bekkai-cho, 12.vii. 1985, T. Nozaki (TN); 2 males, 3 females, Saromabetsu-gawa, Hanazono, saromacho, 7.viii. 1985, T. Nozaki (TN); 10 males, 16 females, Masuhoro-gawa, Koetoi, Wakkanai-shi, 9.viii. 1999, T. Ito and A. Ohkawa (TN); 1 female, Kaminisama, Iwaonai, Asahi-cho, Shibetsu-shi, 9.vii. 1985, T. Nozaki (TN); 1 male, 2 females, Iwafuchi-gawa, Kumaishi-cho, 1–10.vii. 1995, Y. Ito and T. Ito (TN); Miyagi: 1 female, Yoko-kawa, 500 m a.s.l., Shichigashuku-machi, 5.vii. 1998, T. Hattori (TN); Akita: 2 male pupae, Lake Towada-ko, Wainai, Kosaka-machi, 7.vii. 1998, H. Kato (TN); Fukushima: 3 males, 2 females, Surikami-gawa, Nakamoniwa, Iisaka-cho, Fukushima-shi, 31.v. 1997, T. Kishimoto(TN); Tochigi: 1 male, 7 females, Kinomata-gawa, Kitamuro, Kuroiso-shi, 6.vi. 1987, T. Nozaki (TN); Gumma: 3 males, 4 females, Sanba-gawa, Onishi, Fujioka-shi, 29.v. 1991, S. Ishiwata (TN); Tokyo: 1 female, Yagawa, Kunitachi-shi, 14.vi. 1986, N. Kobayashi (TN); 7 males, 3 females, Tama-gawa, Nagata-bashi, Fussa-shi, 23.vii. 1993, T. Nozaki et al . (TN); Kanagawa: 1 male, 1 female, Sagami-gawa, Okada, Atsugi-shi, pupae collected on 23.iii. 1981 emerged on 30.iii– 7.iv. 1981 by T. Nozaki (TN); 2 males, Sakaigawa, Komatsu, Shiroyama-machi, larvae collected on 21.iii. 1984, emerged on 10–13.iv. 1984 by T. Nozaki (TN); 10 females, Sawai-gawa, wada, Fujino-machi, 11.vii. 1984, T. Nozkai (TN); 2 females, Magino, Fujino-machi, 8.vii. 1988, T. Nozaki (TN); Niigata: 2 females, Noguchi, Arakawa-machi, 31.v– 15.vi. 1985, S. Togashi (TN); Sado: 1 female, Tassha-gawa, Sado-shi, 1.viii. 1988, N. Nishimura (TN); Nagano: 2 females, Lake Kizaki, Omachi-shi, 12.x. 1987, M. Uenishi (TN); 1 male, 2 females, Ogurogawa, 900m a.s.l., Ina-shi, 14.vii– 19.ix. 1999, T. Tsuruishi; 1 female, Shira-kawa, 1060m a.s.l., Mitake, Kiso-machi, 4.viii. 1998, T. Nozaki (TN); Gifu: 1 male, Hatsushika-dani, 300 m a.s.l., Motosu-shi, 4.v. 1996, T. Hattori (TN); Shizuoka: 6 females, Okitsu-gawa, Shimizu-shi, 4.x. 1986, T. Nozaki (TN); 1 female, Sugari-gawa, Tadarai, Hamamatsu-shi, 8.v. 1987, T. Nozaki (TN); Aichi: 1 female, Mudoji, Kasamatsu-cho, S. Funakoshi and M. Nakamura (TN); Mie: 3 males, 136 females, Shiroishi, Fujiwara-cho, Inabe-shi, 26.iv.– 4.vii. 1992, H. Morita (TN); Hyogo: 1 male, Nanagama, Shinonsen-cho, 29.vii. 1989, C. Kugo (TN); Nara: 3 males, 1 female, Takami-gawa, Higashiyoshino-mura, 15.vi. 1996, T. Nozaki (TN); Hiroshima: 1 male, 1 female, Nagaya, Yoshida-cho, Akitakata-shi, 31.vii. 1999, S. Nakamura (TN); 1 male, 2 females, Shimominauchi, Yukicho, Saeki-ku, Hiroshima-shi, 25.iv. 1999, S. Nakamura (TN); Tokushima: 1 female, Takanose-kyo, Kito-son, 18.vii. 1998, I. Yamashita (TN); Ehime: 3 females, Teppoishigawa, Kumakogen-cho, 22.v. 1999, T. Ito and A. Ohkawa (TN); Kochi: 1 male, Yosagoetoge, Ino-cho, 10.vii. 1999, I. Yamashita (TN); Tsushima: 4 males, Izuhara-machi, Tsushima-shi, 18.ix. 1992, H. Maruyama (TN); Yaku-shima: 6 females, Shiratani-unsuikyo, 620m a.s.l., Kamiyaku-cho, 12.vii. 1992, T. Ogata (TN); 14 males, Yukawa-bashi, Miyanoura-gawa, Kamiyaku-cho, 9.v. 2006, T. Ito (TN). Distribution. Japan (Hokkaido, Honshu, Shikoku, Kyushu, Sado, Tsushima, Yakushima), Russia (Sakhalin, Kuriles). Japanese name. Ningyo-tobikera. Remarks. This species is the most common Goera species in Japanese main islands and is also distributed in adjacent islands. Tsuda and Akagi (1955) synonymized Goera squamifera Martynov 1909 collected from Siberia with this species, and several records as G. japonica from Russia and Korea have been published in recent years (Kumanski 1991; Arefina 1997; Choe et al . 1999). However, their illustrations suggest that the continental species is the same species as Goera interrogationis Botosaneanu 1970. Although G. interrogationis is very similar to G. japonica in male and female genitalia, it differs from the latter in unbranched ventrolateral processes of male tergum X, in many tiny spines on phallus, and in the shape of female segment X in lateral aspect. Although we examined several specimens collected from Russia (Ussuri River) and Korea, G. japonica was not found at all. Since Martynov (1935) recorded G. squamifera also from Amur region, this species may be the same species as G. interrogationis not G. japonica . Confirmation of this possible synonymy awaits examination of the holotype of G. squamifera . Navás (1933) described Goera nipponensis based on material collected from Kofou (?Kofu, Yamanashi, central Honshu). In the original description of G. japonica by Banks (1906), comb-like spines on male abdominal segment was described as ‘comb on venter of male has 5 teeth each side, and the middle one is not much longer than the others’. On the other hand, Navás (1933) pointed out that his species has 13 teeth with longer central one on the male abdominal sternite. The character is, however, variable, and we could not recognize any related species of G. japonica in Honshu. Navás’s description, especially the illustration of male abdominal segments, agrees with that described here for G. japonica . This strongly suggests that G. nipponensis must be a junior subjective synonym of G. japonica , although we could not examine its holotype. : Published as part of Nozaki, Takao & Tanida, Kazumi, 2006, The genus Goera Stephens (Trichoptera: Goeridae) in Japan, pp. 1-29 in Zootaxa 1339 on pages 3-5, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.174356 : {"references": ["Banks, N. (1906) New Trichoptera from Japan. Proceedings of the Entomological Society of Washington, 7, 106 - 113.", "Tsuda, M. & Akagi, I. (1955) On the Japanese species of genus Goera. Bulletin of the Biogeographical Society of Japan, 16, 235 - 238 [in Japanese].", "Chihara, A. (1956) Drei japanische Sericostomatiden-Puppen. Kontyu, Tokyo, 24, 81 - 86.", "Tsuda, M. & Akagi, I. (1962) Trichoptera. In M. Tsuda (Ed.), Aquatic Entomology. Hokuryukan, Tokyo, pp. 112 - 148 [in Japanese].", "Kobayashi, M. (1971) Studies on the fauna and classification of aquatic insects (Trichoptera) in the Kanagawa Prefecture. Research Report of the Kanagawa prefectural Museum, Natural History, 3, 1 - 49 + pls. 1 - 24 [in Japanese].", "Tani, K. (1977) Trichoptera. In S. Ito et al. (Eds.), Colored Illustrations of the Insects of Japan 2, Hoikusha, Osaka, pp. 184 - 206 [in Japanese].", "Kobayashi, M. (1984) On the Trichoptera from the Oshima Peninsula, Hokkaido, Japan (Insecta). Bulletin of the Kanagawa prefectural Museum (Natural Science), 15, 15 - 36 [in Japanese with English abstract].", "Tanida, K. (1985) Trichoptera. In T. Kawai (Ed.), An Illustrated Book of Aquatic Insects of Japan, Tokai University Press, Tokyo, pp. 167 - 215 [in Japanese].", "Navas, L. (1933) Insecta Orientalia. Memorie della Pontificia della Academia Scienze Nuovi Lincei, 17, 75 - 108.", "Martynov A. V. (1909) Les Trichopteres de la Siberie et des regions adjacentes. Part 1. Les familles des Phryganeidae et des Sericostomatidae. Zoologicheskii Musei, Akademiia Nauk SSSR, 14, 223 - 255 [in Russian with English description of new species].", "Kumanski, K. (1991) Studies on Trichoptera (Insecta) of Korea (North). V. Superfamily of Limnephiloidea, except Lepidostomatidae and Leptoceridae. Insecta Koreana, 8, 15 - 29.", "Arefina, T. I. (1997) Goeridae. In Lehr, P. A. (Senior editor), Key to the insects of Russian Far East, Vol. 5, Trichoptera and Lepidoptera, Dal'nauka, Vladivostok, pp. 126 - 128 [in Russian].", "Choe, H-J., Kumanski, K. & Woo, K-S. (1999) Taxonomic notes on Limnephilidae and Goeridae (Trichoptera: Limnophiloidea) of Korea. The Korean Journal of Systematic Zoology, 15, 27 - 49.", "Botosaneanu, L. (1970) Trichopteres de la Republique Democratique-Populaire de la Coree. Annales Zoologici, 15, 1 - 85.", "Martynov, A. V. (1935) Trichoptera of the Amur region. Part I. Travaux l'Institut Zoologique Academie des Sciences de l'URSS, 2 - 3, 205 - 395."]}
format Text
author Nozaki, Takao
Tanida, Kazumi
author_facet Nozaki, Takao
Tanida, Kazumi
author_sort Nozaki, Takao
title Goera japonica Banks 1906
title_short Goera japonica Banks 1906
title_full Goera japonica Banks 1906
title_fullStr Goera japonica Banks 1906
title_full_unstemmed Goera japonica Banks 1906
title_sort goera japonica banks 1906
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2006
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6258227
https://zenodo.org/record/6258227
long_lat ENVELOPE(162.783,162.783,-71.350,-71.350)
ENVELOPE(71.333,71.333,66.767,66.767)
ENVELOPE(65.767,65.767,-70.750,-70.750)
ENVELOPE(-133.027,-133.027,54.181,54.181)
ENVELOPE(155.262,155.262,50.204,50.204)
geographic Fukushima
Nagata
Mura
Kizaki
Yaku
Fussa
geographic_facet Fukushima
Nagata
Mura
Kizaki
Yaku
Fussa
genre Sakhalin
Siberia
genre_facet Sakhalin
Siberia
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6258227 2023-05-15T18:09:24+02:00 Goera japonica Banks 1906 Nozaki, Takao Tanida, Kazumi 2006 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6258227 https://zenodo.org/record/6258227 unknown Zenodo http://publication.plazi.org/id/C1689448FFE9FF84A0492C74FFF7FFED http://zoobank.org/5C3E86FD-0FAF-472B-82F4-EF00FA48C7EF https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.174356 http://publication.plazi.org/id/C1689448FFE9FF84A0492C74FFF7FFED https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.174357 http://zoobank.org/5C3E86FD-0FAF-472B-82F4-EF00FA48C7EF https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6258226 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 Trichoptera Goeridae Goera Goera japonica article-journal ScholarlyArticle Taxonomic treatment Text 2006 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6258227 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.174356 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.174357 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6258226 2022-04-01T12:24:58Z Goera japonica Banks 1906 Fig. 1 Goera japonica Banks 1906, 108– 109, male; Tsuda and Akagi 1955, 235– 236, larva, case; Chihara 1956, 81– 82, pupa; Tsuda and Akagi 1962, 140, larva, case; Kobayashi 1971, 35– 36, male, female; Tani 1977, 205, male; Kobayashi 1984, 20, male, female; Tanida 1985, 197, larva, case. Goera nipponensis Navás 1933, 107– 108, male, female. Syn. nov. Adult. Body, wings, antennae yellowish brown. Head short; ocelli absent; anterior setal warts round in female, absent in male; posterior setal warts large and oval. Antennae 8–11 mm long; scape ca. 1.5 mm long, with long setae. In male maxillary palpi, distal segment oval, membranous and elastic with long setae on outer surface and brown scale lope on mesal surface; apical tube-like lobe bearing many black scales is housed in the mesal surface, expanded one very long. Male abdominal sternite VI with 9–19 long spines in comb-like arrangement, central one usually longest and broad but number, length and shape variable; sternite V with several small spines. Female abdominal sternite VI with 6–20 small spines, sternite V usually bears several tiny spines. Male genitalia. Segment IX long, oblique in lateral aspect; ventromesal lobe long, about 5 times as long as wide in ventral aspect. Dorsal process of tergum X absent. Paired ventrolateral processes of tergum X long, strongly sclerotized, branched in apical third, each branch acute. Preanal appendages long, about 2 / 3 as long as ventrolateral processes. Inferior appendages large; basal segment elongate, oblique, large; distal segment distinct, bearing long dorsal lobe with rounded apex, mesal process strongly sclerotized with acute apex directed laterad. Phallus simple, tubular, dorsum of apical half membranous, phallic apodema triangular in lateral aspect. Female genitalia. Tergum X bilobed, each 2 times as long as wide, apices triangular in lateral aspect. Supragenital plate long, relatively acute in ventral aspect. Lamellae slightly bilobed, rounded apically. Gonopod plate about as long as wide; apicomesal process trapezoid. Spermathecal sclerite slender with paired lateral lip in ventral aspect, bearing rectangular box anteriorly. Larva. Larval stage has been described by Tsuda and Akagi (1955) and Tanida (1985). Specimens examined. Hokkaido: 1 male, 3 females, Nishifuren-gawa, Bekkai-cho, 12.vii. 1985, T. Nozaki (TN); 2 males, 3 females, Saromabetsu-gawa, Hanazono, saromacho, 7.viii. 1985, T. Nozaki (TN); 10 males, 16 females, Masuhoro-gawa, Koetoi, Wakkanai-shi, 9.viii. 1999, T. Ito and A. Ohkawa (TN); 1 female, Kaminisama, Iwaonai, Asahi-cho, Shibetsu-shi, 9.vii. 1985, T. Nozaki (TN); 1 male, 2 females, Iwafuchi-gawa, Kumaishi-cho, 1–10.vii. 1995, Y. Ito and T. Ito (TN); Miyagi: 1 female, Yoko-kawa, 500 m a.s.l., Shichigashuku-machi, 5.vii. 1998, T. Hattori (TN); Akita: 2 male pupae, Lake Towada-ko, Wainai, Kosaka-machi, 7.vii. 1998, H. Kato (TN); Fukushima: 3 males, 2 females, Surikami-gawa, Nakamoniwa, Iisaka-cho, Fukushima-shi, 31.v. 1997, T. Kishimoto(TN); Tochigi: 1 male, 7 females, Kinomata-gawa, Kitamuro, Kuroiso-shi, 6.vi. 1987, T. Nozaki (TN); Gumma: 3 males, 4 females, Sanba-gawa, Onishi, Fujioka-shi, 29.v. 1991, S. Ishiwata (TN); Tokyo: 1 female, Yagawa, Kunitachi-shi, 14.vi. 1986, N. Kobayashi (TN); 7 males, 3 females, Tama-gawa, Nagata-bashi, Fussa-shi, 23.vii. 1993, T. Nozaki et al . (TN); Kanagawa: 1 male, 1 female, Sagami-gawa, Okada, Atsugi-shi, pupae collected on 23.iii. 1981 emerged on 30.iii– 7.iv. 1981 by T. Nozaki (TN); 2 males, Sakaigawa, Komatsu, Shiroyama-machi, larvae collected on 21.iii. 1984, emerged on 10–13.iv. 1984 by T. Nozaki (TN); 10 females, Sawai-gawa, wada, Fujino-machi, 11.vii. 1984, T. Nozkai (TN); 2 females, Magino, Fujino-machi, 8.vii. 1988, T. Nozaki (TN); Niigata: 2 females, Noguchi, Arakawa-machi, 31.v– 15.vi. 1985, S. Togashi (TN); Sado: 1 female, Tassha-gawa, Sado-shi, 1.viii. 1988, N. Nishimura (TN); Nagano: 2 females, Lake Kizaki, Omachi-shi, 12.x. 1987, M. Uenishi (TN); 1 male, 2 females, Ogurogawa, 900m a.s.l., Ina-shi, 14.vii– 19.ix. 1999, T. Tsuruishi; 1 female, Shira-kawa, 1060m a.s.l., Mitake, Kiso-machi, 4.viii. 1998, T. Nozaki (TN); Gifu: 1 male, Hatsushika-dani, 300 m a.s.l., Motosu-shi, 4.v. 1996, T. Hattori (TN); Shizuoka: 6 females, Okitsu-gawa, Shimizu-shi, 4.x. 1986, T. Nozaki (TN); 1 female, Sugari-gawa, Tadarai, Hamamatsu-shi, 8.v. 1987, T. Nozaki (TN); Aichi: 1 female, Mudoji, Kasamatsu-cho, S. Funakoshi and M. Nakamura (TN); Mie: 3 males, 136 females, Shiroishi, Fujiwara-cho, Inabe-shi, 26.iv.– 4.vii. 1992, H. Morita (TN); Hyogo: 1 male, Nanagama, Shinonsen-cho, 29.vii. 1989, C. Kugo (TN); Nara: 3 males, 1 female, Takami-gawa, Higashiyoshino-mura, 15.vi. 1996, T. Nozaki (TN); Hiroshima: 1 male, 1 female, Nagaya, Yoshida-cho, Akitakata-shi, 31.vii. 1999, S. Nakamura (TN); 1 male, 2 females, Shimominauchi, Yukicho, Saeki-ku, Hiroshima-shi, 25.iv. 1999, S. Nakamura (TN); Tokushima: 1 female, Takanose-kyo, Kito-son, 18.vii. 1998, I. Yamashita (TN); Ehime: 3 females, Teppoishigawa, Kumakogen-cho, 22.v. 1999, T. Ito and A. Ohkawa (TN); Kochi: 1 male, Yosagoetoge, Ino-cho, 10.vii. 1999, I. Yamashita (TN); Tsushima: 4 males, Izuhara-machi, Tsushima-shi, 18.ix. 1992, H. Maruyama (TN); Yaku-shima: 6 females, Shiratani-unsuikyo, 620m a.s.l., Kamiyaku-cho, 12.vii. 1992, T. Ogata (TN); 14 males, Yukawa-bashi, Miyanoura-gawa, Kamiyaku-cho, 9.v. 2006, T. Ito (TN). Distribution. Japan (Hokkaido, Honshu, Shikoku, Kyushu, Sado, Tsushima, Yakushima), Russia (Sakhalin, Kuriles). Japanese name. Ningyo-tobikera. Remarks. This species is the most common Goera species in Japanese main islands and is also distributed in adjacent islands. Tsuda and Akagi (1955) synonymized Goera squamifera Martynov 1909 collected from Siberia with this species, and several records as G. japonica from Russia and Korea have been published in recent years (Kumanski 1991; Arefina 1997; Choe et al . 1999). However, their illustrations suggest that the continental species is the same species as Goera interrogationis Botosaneanu 1970. Although G. interrogationis is very similar to G. japonica in male and female genitalia, it differs from the latter in unbranched ventrolateral processes of male tergum X, in many tiny spines on phallus, and in the shape of female segment X in lateral aspect. Although we examined several specimens collected from Russia (Ussuri River) and Korea, G. japonica was not found at all. Since Martynov (1935) recorded G. squamifera also from Amur region, this species may be the same species as G. interrogationis not G. japonica . Confirmation of this possible synonymy awaits examination of the holotype of G. squamifera . Navás (1933) described Goera nipponensis based on material collected from Kofou (?Kofu, Yamanashi, central Honshu). In the original description of G. japonica by Banks (1906), comb-like spines on male abdominal segment was described as ‘comb on venter of male has 5 teeth each side, and the middle one is not much longer than the others’. On the other hand, Navás (1933) pointed out that his species has 13 teeth with longer central one on the male abdominal sternite. The character is, however, variable, and we could not recognize any related species of G. japonica in Honshu. Navás’s description, especially the illustration of male abdominal segments, agrees with that described here for G. japonica . This strongly suggests that G. nipponensis must be a junior subjective synonym of G. japonica , although we could not examine its holotype. : Published as part of Nozaki, Takao & Tanida, Kazumi, 2006, The genus Goera Stephens (Trichoptera: Goeridae) in Japan, pp. 1-29 in Zootaxa 1339 on pages 3-5, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.174356 : {"references": ["Banks, N. (1906) New Trichoptera from Japan. Proceedings of the Entomological Society of Washington, 7, 106 - 113.", "Tsuda, M. & Akagi, I. (1955) On the Japanese species of genus Goera. Bulletin of the Biogeographical Society of Japan, 16, 235 - 238 [in Japanese].", "Chihara, A. (1956) Drei japanische Sericostomatiden-Puppen. Kontyu, Tokyo, 24, 81 - 86.", "Tsuda, M. & Akagi, I. (1962) Trichoptera. In M. Tsuda (Ed.), Aquatic Entomology. Hokuryukan, Tokyo, pp. 112 - 148 [in Japanese].", "Kobayashi, M. (1971) Studies on the fauna and classification of aquatic insects (Trichoptera) in the Kanagawa Prefecture. Research Report of the Kanagawa prefectural Museum, Natural History, 3, 1 - 49 + pls. 1 - 24 [in Japanese].", "Tani, K. (1977) Trichoptera. In S. Ito et al. (Eds.), Colored Illustrations of the Insects of Japan 2, Hoikusha, Osaka, pp. 184 - 206 [in Japanese].", "Kobayashi, M. (1984) On the Trichoptera from the Oshima Peninsula, Hokkaido, Japan (Insecta). Bulletin of the Kanagawa prefectural Museum (Natural Science), 15, 15 - 36 [in Japanese with English abstract].", "Tanida, K. (1985) Trichoptera. In T. Kawai (Ed.), An Illustrated Book of Aquatic Insects of Japan, Tokai University Press, Tokyo, pp. 167 - 215 [in Japanese].", "Navas, L. (1933) Insecta Orientalia. Memorie della Pontificia della Academia Scienze Nuovi Lincei, 17, 75 - 108.", "Martynov A. V. (1909) Les Trichopteres de la Siberie et des regions adjacentes. Part 1. Les familles des Phryganeidae et des Sericostomatidae. Zoologicheskii Musei, Akademiia Nauk SSSR, 14, 223 - 255 [in Russian with English description of new species].", "Kumanski, K. (1991) Studies on Trichoptera (Insecta) of Korea (North). V. Superfamily of Limnephiloidea, except Lepidostomatidae and Leptoceridae. Insecta Koreana, 8, 15 - 29.", "Arefina, T. I. (1997) Goeridae. In Lehr, P. A. (Senior editor), Key to the insects of Russian Far East, Vol. 5, Trichoptera and Lepidoptera, Dal'nauka, Vladivostok, pp. 126 - 128 [in Russian].", "Choe, H-J., Kumanski, K. & Woo, K-S. (1999) Taxonomic notes on Limnephilidae and Goeridae (Trichoptera: Limnophiloidea) of Korea. The Korean Journal of Systematic Zoology, 15, 27 - 49.", "Botosaneanu, L. (1970) Trichopteres de la Republique Democratique-Populaire de la Coree. Annales Zoologici, 15, 1 - 85.", "Martynov, A. V. (1935) Trichoptera of the Amur region. Part I. Travaux l'Institut Zoologique Academie des Sciences de l'URSS, 2 - 3, 205 - 395."]} Text Sakhalin Siberia DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Fukushima Nagata ENVELOPE(162.783,162.783,-71.350,-71.350) Mura ENVELOPE(71.333,71.333,66.767,66.767) Kizaki ENVELOPE(65.767,65.767,-70.750,-70.750) Yaku ENVELOPE(-133.027,-133.027,54.181,54.181) Fussa ENVELOPE(155.262,155.262,50.204,50.204)