Sweltsa naica

Sweltsa naica (Provancher) (Figs. 16-20) Perla naica Provancher, 1876:214. Holotype ♂ (Quebec Provincial Museum), vicinity of Quebec City Alloperla novascotiana Needham & Claassen, 1925:113. Holotype ♂ (Cornell University), Nova Scotia, Truro, synonymy by Ricker, 1952 Material examined. NEWFOUND...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Stark, Bill P., Kondratieff, Boris C., Kirchner, Ralph F., Stewart, Kenneth W.
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:https://zenodo.org/record/4763371
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4763371
Description
Summary:Sweltsa naica (Provancher) (Figs. 16-20) Perla naica Provancher, 1876:214. Holotype ♂ (Quebec Provincial Museum), vicinity of Quebec City Alloperla novascotiana Needham & Claassen, 1925:113. Holotype ♂ (Cornell University), Nova Scotia, Truro, synonymy by Ricker, 1952 Material examined. NEWFOUNDLAND: Bowed Brook, Hwy 430, Bellburns, 5 June 1998, B.C. Kondratieff, R. W. Baumann, 13♂, 1 pharate larva (CSU). PENNSYLVANIA: Westmoreland Co., Powdermill Run, Powdermill Nature Reserve, 15 May 1993, S.A. Grubbs, 6♂, 2♀, 7 larval skins (WKU). Same site, 16 May 1993, S.A. Grubbs, 21♂, 13♀, 5 larval skins (WKU). Mature larva. Body length 10 mm. General color brown, head darker over frons (Fig. 16). Pronotum bearing ca. 14 anterolateral setae and ca. 19 posterolateral setae near margin; posterolateral row extends to median suture. Mesonotum bearing ca. 13 prominent outer marginal setae and metanotum bearing ca. 17 prominent outer marginal setae (Fig. 17); intercalary surface of metanotal wingpad with numerous setae. Fore femora with numerous thick setae in basal half and along dorsal margin (Fig. 18); dorsal margin with a few fringe setae. Tibiae with outer fringe setae and inner row of thick setae. Posterior abdominal fringe on tergum 8 with median field occupied by a small group of thin setae, tergum 9 fringe with thick setae in median field (Fig. 19). Cerci with ca. 15 segments; long dorsal setae in segmental whorls about as long as 2 segments (Fig. 20); most apical segments with several long setae visible in profile. Comments. The distinctive shoehorn shaped male epiproct for S. naica suggests it is not closely related to other eastern Nearctic members of the genus, however Surdick (2004) presents evidence which support the species being more closely related to members of the S. onkos complex than to S. oregonensis (Frison) or other western species with similar epiproct structure. Geographically, S. naica is known from West Virginia and Virginia, north through Atlantic Canada (Surdick 2004), where it is often ...