Typhloplaninae

Typhloplaninae Luther, 1904 Strongylostoma elongatum Hofsten, 1907 (Fig. 2 F) New localities in Spain. Doñana National Park, Provincia de Huelva, Spain (36 ° 49 ’ 27 ”N, 6 ° 21 ’ 40 ”W). Llanos del Taraje near Ecomuseo Robledo de la Plancha: muddy temporal pond with Ranunculus aquatilis and sedges (...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Steenkiste, Niels Van, Tessens, Bart, Krznaric, Kathleen, Artois, Tom
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: 2011
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Online Access:https://zenodo.org/record/6182201
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6182201
Description
Summary:Typhloplaninae Luther, 1904 Strongylostoma elongatum Hofsten, 1907 (Fig. 2 F) New localities in Spain. Doñana National Park, Provincia de Huelva, Spain (36 ° 49 ’ 27 ”N, 6 ° 21 ’ 40 ”W). Llanos del Taraje near Ecomuseo Robledo de la Plancha: muddy temporal pond with Ranunculus aquatilis and sedges (25 /03/ 2008). Doñana National Park, Provincia de Huelva, Spain (37 °04’ 23 ”N, 6 ° 22 ’ 28 ”W). Laguna de la FAO: permanent water body with submersed vegetation (05/04/ 2008). Other localities in Spain. Central areas (Sierra de Guadarrama and river Tajo basin, see Gamo & Noreña- Janssen 1998). New locality outside Spain. Palearctic: Mol, Antwerp, Belgium (51 ° 13 ’06”N, 05° 10 ’ 49 ”E). Buitengoor: aquatic vegetation from a marsh in an open area (20 /08/ 2008). Known distribution. Widespread throughout the Palearctic: many localities in Europe, Western Russia, Siberia (see Luther 1963 for localities and references), Western Europe (UK: North Wales) (Young 1972 b, 1973), Central Europe (Germany: South Lower Saxony) (Heitkamp 1982), Eastern Europe (Romania: floodplain of the Danube, littoral freshwater lakes of the Black Sea) (Mack-Fira 1968; 1970 b), Western Russia (Urals, Northern Dvina River and upper Volga River) (Rogozin 1996; Korgina 1999, 2002) and the Middle East (Israel) (Noreña et al. 2008); Nearctic: Greenland (Steinböck 1932), USA (New York, Wisconsin) (Kolasa et al. 1987; Watermolen 2005), Canada (Ontario) (Gregory et al. 2000). Material. Studies on several live animals from the new localities in Spain of which three were whole mounted. Observations on one live specimen from Belgium. Remarks. Strongylostoma elongatum can easily be recognized from the other representatives of the taxon Strongylostoma Ørsted, 1844 by the construction of the copulatory organ. Spines are only present in the distal part of the ejaculatory duct, while other species have spines over the entire length of the ejaculatory duct (S. cirratum Beklemischew, 1922, S. dicorymbum Marcus, 1946 and S. radiatum Müller, 1774) or completely ...