387 research outputs found
Rhyacophila polonica McLachlan 1879
Rhyacophila polonica McLachlan 1879 KOSOVO: Mitrovicë Municipality, Mazhiq Village, middle section of the stream, 850 m a.s.l., 42.8688 °N, 20.8271 °E, 23.vii. 2014, leg. Halil Ibrahimi (3 males); same data except 24.vii. 2014, light trap, leg. Halil Ibrahimi, Fitesa Asllani Ibrahimi, Irsa Ibrahimi and Idlir Ibrahimi (1 male). Prishtinë Municipality, Keqekollë Village, middle section of the stream, 715 m a.s.l., 42.740626 °N, 21.336689 °E, 14.v. 2014, leg. Halil Ibrahimi (12 males); same data except 17.v. 2014, leg. Halil Ibrahimi (3 males, 1 female). Mitrovicë Municipality, Bajgorë area, entrance into Kaçandoll Village from the Mitrovicë side, side spring of Kaçandoll River by the main road, 1262 m a.s.l., 42.979 °N, 21.0509 °E, 21.v. 2014, leg. Halil Ibrahimi (11 females, 5 males).Published as part of Ibrahimi, Halil, Kučinić, Mladen, Vitecek, Simon, Waringer, Johann, Graf, Wolfram, Previšić, Ana, Bálint, Miklós, Keresztes, Lujza & Pauls, Steffen U., 2015, New records for the Kosovo caddisfly fauna with the description of a new species, Drusus dardanicus sp. nov. (Trichoptera: Limnephilidae), pp. 551-568 in Zootaxa 4032 (5) on page 555, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4032.5.5, http://zenodo.org/record/23343
The larva of Rhyacophila palmeni McLachlan 1879 (Trichoptera: Rhyacophilidae) from Greece and Kosovo with notes on ecology and zoogeography including a key to the known Greek Rhyacophila larvae
Karaouzas, Ioannis, Ibrahimi, Halil, Waringer, Johann (2018): The larva of Rhyacophila palmeni McLachlan 1879 (Trichoptera: Rhyacophilidae) from Greece and Kosovo with notes on ecology and zoogeography including a key to the known Greek Rhyacophila larvae. Zootaxa 4514 (1): 97-106, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4514.1.
Tinodes atlasensis Ibrahimi, Mabrouki & Taybi, sp. nov. (Trichoptera: Psychomyiidae), a new species from Atlas Mountains, Morocco
The caddisfly fauna of North Africa and Morocco is still poorly known, with only a few historical and recent investigations, carried out sporadically. In this paper we describe a new species, Tinodes atlasensis Ibrahimi, Mabrouki & Taybi, sp. nov. from the Atlas Mountains in Morocco. The new species is closest to Tinodes baenai Gonzales & Otero, 1984, known from the Iberian Peninsula and mainly differs by the shape of segment IX, coxopodites, harpago and the process of basal plate.
Tinodes atlasensis Ibrahimi, Mabrouki & Taybi, sp. nov. is the seventh known species of the genus Tinodes Curtis, 1834 from Morocco. Future caddisfly investigations in this North African country will most certainly increase the number of the known species and reveal other new ones
Hydropsyche
<i>Hydropsyche</i> sp. <p>KOSOVO: Mitrovicë Municipality, Mazhiq Village, middle section of the stream, 850 m a.s.l., 42.8688°N, 20.8271°E, 23.vii.2014, leg. Halil Ibrahimi (8 females); same data except 29.vii.2014, leg. Halil Ibrahimi (3 females). Mitrovicë Municipality, Bajgorë area, entrance into Kaçandoll Village from Mitrovicë side, side spring of Kaçandoll River by the main road, 1262 m a.s.l., 42.979°N, 21.0509°E, 21.v.2014, leg. Halil Ibrahimi (2 females). Podujevë Municipality, Shatoricë Mountain, stream above Bollosicë Village, 1330 m a.s.l., 43.118169°N, 20.99330°E, 11.v.2014, leg. Halil Ibrahimi (2 females).</p>Published as part of <i>Ibrahimi, Halil, Kučinić, Mladen, Vitecek, Simon, Waringer, Johann, Graf, Wolfram, Previšić, Ana, Bálint, Miklós, Keresztes, Lujza & Pauls, Steffen U., 2015, New records for the Kosovo caddisfly fauna with the description of a new species, Drusus dardanicus sp. nov. (Trichoptera: Limnephilidae), pp. 551-568 in Zootaxa 4032 (5)</i> on page 555, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4032.5.5, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/233435">http://zenodo.org/record/233435</a>
Chaetopteryx bosniaca Marinkovic-Gospodnetic 1959
<i>Chaetopteryx bosniaca</i> Marinković-Gospodnetić 1959 <p>KOSOVO: Podujevë Municipality, Shatoricë Mountain, stream above Bollosicë Village, 1330 m a.s.l., 43.118169°N, 20.99330°E, 11.xi.2014, leg. Halil Ibrahimi (2 males, 3 females). Podujevë Municipality, Brecë Village, side spring of Llap River, 838 m a.s.l., 43.071470°N, 21.077644°E, 11.xi.2014, leg. Halil Ibrahimi (3 males). Mitrovicë Municipality, Bajgorë area, entrance into Kaçandoll Village from Mitrovicë side, side spring of Kaçandoll River by the main road, 1262 m a.s.l., 42.979°N, 21.0509°E, 12.xi.2014, leg. Halil Ibrahimi (3 males, 4 females).</p>Published as part of <i>Ibrahimi, Halil, Kučinić, Mladen, Vitecek, Simon, Waringer, Johann, Graf, Wolfram, Previšić, Ana, Bálint, Miklós, Keresztes, Lujza & Pauls, Steffen U., 2015, New records for the Kosovo caddisfly fauna with the description of a new species, Drusus dardanicus sp. nov. (Trichoptera: Limnephilidae), pp. 551-568 in Zootaxa 4032 (5)</i> on page 561, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4032.5.5, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/233435">http://zenodo.org/record/233435</a>
FIGURE 8 in Potamophylax idliri sp. nov. (Trichoptera: Limnephilidae), a new species from the Jastrebac Mountains in Serbia, with molecular and ecological notes
FIGURE 8. Comparative morphology of male genitalia of the three closest species of the P. winneguthi Group: 8A, P. idliri sp. nov.; 8B, Potamophylax coronavirus Ibrahimi, Bilalli & Vitecek 2021 (in Ibrahimi et al. 2021); 8C, Potamophylax juliani Kumanski 1999. 1, lateral profile; 2, intermediate appendages on dorsal view; 3, parameres in lateral view.Published as part of Ibrahimi, Halil, Bilalli, Astrit, Kučinić, Mladen, Hlebec, Dora, Gashi, Agim, Kotori, Linda Grapci, Stojanović, Katarina & Živić, Ivana, 2022, Potamophylax idliri sp. nov. (Trichoptera: Limnephilidae), a new species from the Jastrebac Mountains in Serbia, with molecular and ecological notes, pp. 373-392 in Zootaxa 5116 (3) on page 384, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5116.3.4, http://zenodo.org/record/637219
Lepidostomatidae
Lepidostomatidae <p> <b> <i>Lepidostoma basale</i> (Kolenati 1848</b> )</p> <p>KOSOVO: Podujevë Municipality, Brecë Village, side spring of Llap River, 838 m a.s.l., 43.071470°N, 21.077644°E, 11.v.2014, leg. Halil Ibrahimi (2 males). Mitrovicë Municipality, Bajgorë area, entrance into Kaçandoll Village from Mitrovicë side, side spring of Kaçandoll River by the main road, 1262 m a.s.l., 42.979°N, 21.0509°E, 19.v.2014, leg. Halil Ibrahimi (1 male).</p>Published as part of <i>Ibrahimi, Halil, Kučinić, Mladen, Vitecek, Simon, Waringer, Johann, Graf, Wolfram, Previšić, Ana, Bálint, Miklós, Keresztes, Lujza & Pauls, Steffen U., 2015, New records for the Kosovo caddisfly fauna with the description of a new species, Drusus dardanicus sp. nov. (Trichoptera: Limnephilidae), pp. 551-568 in Zootaxa 4032 (5)</i> on page 562, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4032.5.5, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/233435">http://zenodo.org/record/233435</a>
Potamophylax idliri Ibrahimi, Bilalli & Kucinic 2022, sp. nov.
Potamophylax idliri Ibrahimi, Bilalli & Kučinić sp. nov. (Figs 3, 4, 5). Type material. Holotype ( male): Serbia, Kruševac Municipality, Jastrebac Mountain, Majorova Česma spring, 43.39818°N, 21.39549°E, 988 m asl, 21.x.2016, leg. Halil Ibrahimi and Astrit Bilalli. Paratypes (1 male): same locality data as holotype, 16.x.2020, leg. Halil Ibrahimi, Agim Gashi, Linda Grapci-Kotori. (1 male): Serbia, Kruševac Municipality, Jastrebac Mountain, stream nearby Majorova Česma spring, 43.40276°N, 21.40018 °E, 891 m asl, 21.x.2016, leg. Halil Ibrahimi and Astrit Bilalli. The holotype and paratypes are deposited at the Department of Biology, Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences, University of Prishtina “Hasan Prishtina,” Prishtinë, Kosovo, collection “Halil Ibrahimi-Jastrebac Collection”. Distribution. Serbia, Jastrebac Mountains. Diagnosis. Males of the new species are most similar to those of Potamophylax coronavirus and P. juliani. The male of the new species differs from those of all known species of the Potamophylax winneguthi Species Group by its uniquely shaped parameres, which are short, narrow, slightly sinuate in lateral view (Figs 4E, 5A), each with its apex slightly wider than the base, supporting a bunch of apical spines of different sizes. The P. idliri sp. nov. male further differs from that of its most similar congeners mainly in exhibiting a combination of the following characters: (1) elongate subrectangular superior appendages in lateral view; (2) acuminate, rounded apices of intermediate appendages; (3) short inferior appendages in lateral view, turned upwards, each with a longer ventral edge and with dorsal and ventral margins of the upper portion not set parallel but diverging from each other; (4) tergum VIII with a narrow spinate area, roughly rectangular in dorsal view, slightly wider at the base. Males of P. coronavirus, similar to P. idliri sp. nov., have elongate subrectangular superior appendages in lateral view and rounded apices of intermediate appendages, but a totally different shape of the inferior appendages and parameres. In P. coronavirus (1) inferior appendages are irregular, considerably longer, bulging dorsally at the area between them and segment IX in lateral view, each with a high and broad upper protruding portion and with a narrower distance between the dorsal and ventral corners of the upper portion, which are set parallel to each other and directed mesad in lateral view; (2) parameres are short and stout, each with a wider base and narrower apex and with very thick spines originating on the distal third, reaching only slightly beyond the apex. The P. juliani male has (1) small ovoid superior appendages; (2) long, slender intermediate appendages each with a sharply acuminate apex; (3) inferior appendages each with a short protruding upper portion as high as half of the entire appendage’s height and with a wide distance between the dorsal and ventral corners, set parallel to each other and directed mesad; (4) tergum VIII has a spinate area in dorsal view that is narrow at the apex and considerably wider at the base; and (5) the short stout parameres each have a wider base, with 15–20 thick spines of medium length originating mostly from the tip. The new species has some resemblance with P. winneguthi, as well. However, the male of P. winneguthi differs from all the above-mentioned three species mostly by its (1) small, laterally rounded superior appendages; (2) long inferior appendages, parallel-edged and dorsally truncated in a rectangular manner, each longer on its ventral edge, directed dorsad; and (3) short and stout, parallel-edged parameres each with 5–7 very long spines originating from the distal half. The other species of this group, P. haidukorum is characterized by its long, filamentous, sinuate parameres without apical spines. In addition to the above-mentioned diagnosis, the new species differs from its most similar congeners in several other minor characters, such as the following: (1) the apicomesal excision of the aedeagus tip in P. idliri sp. nov. is narrower than in P. coronavirus; (2) the aedeagus tips in ventral view in the new species are shorter than in P. juliani; (3) the paramere sacks in P. idliri sp. nov. are smaller than in P. coronavirus and P. juliani; (4) the parameres of the new species in ventral view are narrower than in P. coronavirus and P. juliani; (5) the parameres of the new species in lateral view are narrow at the base and wider at their distal third, contrary to the parameres of P. winneguthi which are wider at the base and narrower at distal third; and (6) the terminalia (segment IX, appendages and aedeagus and parameres) are smaller versus segment VIII and the rest of the body in the new species as compared to those of P. coronavirus, P. juliani, and P. winneguthi. Description. General appearance (Fig. 3). Head and appendages brown, prothorax, sclerites of meso- and metathorax, coxae, and femora dark brown to black; tibiae and tarsi brown. Wings brown with dark setae. Male maxillary palps each 3-segmented. Length of each forewing 14–15 mm. Spur formula 1-3-4. Antennae dark brown. Male genitalia (Figs 4, 5). Tergite VIII dark brown, in dorsal view roughly rectangular, with apical portion slightly narrower, setation concentrated on proximal sclerotized portion of segment VIII, spinate area located on semimembranous distal portion of segment VIII roughly rectangular in shape with slightly wider proximal portion in dorsal view, covered by small black spines, more abundant apically (Figures 4B, 5B). Segment IX with short and narrow dorsal and ventral portions, laterally broad, convex anteriorly. Superior appendages in lateral view long, subrectangular, with rounded tips, covered with fine setae of medium length (Fig. 4A). Intermediate appendages, sickle-shaped with acuminate rounded apex, turned upwards (Fig. 4A). Inferior appendages short, turned upwards, each with longer ventral edge (Figs 4A, 4C, 5A). Phallic apparatus consisting of aedeagus of medium length and pair of parameres (Figs 4D, 5C). Aedeagus bulbous in ventral view, wide at tip, with bifid apex, apicomesal excision medium-U-shaped; parameres short, slender, slightly sinuate in lateral view (Fig. 4E), each with apex slightly wider than base, bearing bunch of apical spines of different lengths. Female, larva, pupa. Unknown. Etymology. Species epithet ‘idliri’, coined from “i dëlirë” (meaning “pure, chaste or clean” in Albanian), refers to the clean and almost untouched freshwater ecosystems in and around the type locality in the Jastrebac Mountains. The species epithet is also dedicated and refers to the first author’s son, Idlir, who is a frequent assistant in collecting caddisflies throughout the Balkans. The species epithet is not a Latin or latinized word and therefore is to be treated as indeclinable and not needing to agree in gender with the generic name with which it is combined. Ecology and distribution. Potamophylax idliri sp. nov. was found at two localities in the Jastrebac Mountains within a 1 km perimeter, although several other streams of lower altitudes were sampled. Both sampling sites are located inside a densely forested area. The substrate of streams close to the sampling sites was dominated by mesoto macrolithal substrate, surrounded by a dense riparian vegetation. The species was captured only by ultraviolet light traps. The species was collected during October, implying it has an autumn flying period. At the first site it was found at the spring source (eucrenon), while at the second site, much lower (hypocrenon). The new species was found in sympatry with the following species: Rhyacophila brevifurcata Kumanski 1985, R. obtusa Klapálek 1894, Philopotamus montanus (Donovan 1813), Wormaldia cf. subterranea / hellenica, Potamophylax pallidus Klapálek 1899, P. depilis Szczesny 1994 (in Moretti et al. 1994), Micropterna sequax McLachlan 1875, Chaetopteroides kosovarorum Ibrahimi & Oláh 2013 (in Oláh et al. 2013a), Chaetopteryx bosniaca Marinković 1955, Chaetopteryx gonospina Marinkovic-Gospodnetic 1966, Stenophylax mitis McLachlan 1875, S. meridiorientalis Malicky 1980, Limnephilus lunatus Curtis 1834, and Halesus digitatus (von Paula Schrank 1781). Phylogenetic reconstruction. Mitochondrial COI sequences (CROTR356-21 and CROTR357-21) obtained from two males of Potamophylax idliri sp. nov. were identical and form one unique haplotype. Two implemented criteria of phylogenetic reconstruction (ML and BI) yielded congruent topologies and highly similar support values. The new species Potamophylax idliri sp. nov. appeared as a separate lineage, sister to Potamophylax sp. Sharr, which together with P. juliani Kumanski 1999, Potamophylax sp. Rila, Potamophylax sp. Bajgorë, P. coronavirus, P. winneguthi, P. tagas, P. hajlos, and P. qafshtamaensis represented a monophyletic clade, well supported by bootstrap values and Bayesian posterior probabilities (Fig. 7). Relationships within the P. winneguthi Species Group were unresolved and showing different supported values with respect to the applied method. The obtained values of uncorrected sequence divergence (p- distances) between P. idliri sp. nov. and other species of the P. winneguthi Species Group support the morphologically recognized species and are shown in Table 2. Intraspecific uncorrected p -distances are 0.3% in P. juliani and 2% in P. rotundipennis (Brauer 1857). A significantly high value was recorded for specimens of P. pallidus (Klapálek 1899) (9.5%). Interspecific uncorrected p -distances for P. idliri sp. nov. ranged from 4.2% to 15.3%, specifically, 4.2% to Potamophylax sp. Sharr, 4.4% to P. juliani, 4.7% to Potamophylax sp. Rila, 5.3% to Potamophylax sp. Bajgorë, from 5.8% to 6.1% to P. coronavirus, 8.6% to P. winneguthi, 8.8% to P. hajlos, 9.7% to P. qafshtamaensis, 11% to P. tagas, 13.1% to P. rotundipennis, 14.6% to P. luctuosus (Piller & Mitterpacher 1783), 14.9% to P. seprus Oláh, Lodovici & Valle 2011, from 13.2% to 14.9% to P. pallidus, and 15.3% to P. nigricornis (Pictet 1834). The obtained values also support the species status of Potamophylax qafshtamaensis, described based only on morphological differences, with the interspecific uncorrected p -distance to its most close species ranging from 4.4% (Potamophylax hajlos) to 7.3% (Potamophylax tagas).Published as part of Ibrahimi, Halil, Bilalli, Astrit, Kučinić, Mladen, Hlebec, Dora, Gashi, Agim, Kotori, Linda Grapci, Stojanović, Katarina & Živić, Ivana, 2022, Potamophylax idliri sp. nov. (Trichoptera: Limnephilidae), a new species from the Jastrebac Mountains in Serbia, with molecular and ecological notes, pp. 373-392 in Zootaxa 5116 (3) on pages 378-382, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5116.3.4, http://zenodo.org/record/637219
Thremma anomalum McLachlan 1876
<i>Thremma anomalum</i> McLachlan 1876 <p>KOSOVO: Podujevë Municipality, Shatoricë Mountain, stream above Bollosicë Village, 1330 m a.s.l., 43.118169°N, 20.99330°E, 11.v.2014, leg. Halil Ibrahimi (1 male).</p>Published as part of <i>Ibrahimi, Halil, Kučinić, Mladen, Vitecek, Simon, Waringer, Johann, Graf, Wolfram, Previšić, Ana, Bálint, Miklós, Keresztes, Lujza & Pauls, Steffen U., 2015, New records for the Kosovo caddisfly fauna with the description of a new species, Drusus dardanicus sp. nov. (Trichoptera: Limnephilidae), pp. 551-568 in Zootaxa 4032 (5)</i> on page 555, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4032.5.5, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/233435">http://zenodo.org/record/233435</a>
New records for the Kosovo caddisfly fauna with the description of a new species, Drusus dardanicus sp. nov. (Trichoptera: Limnephilidae)
Ibrahimi, Halil, Kučinić, Mladen, Vitecek, Simon, Waringer, Johann, Graf, Wolfram, Previšić, Ana, Bálint, Miklós, Keresztes, Lujza, Pauls, Steffen U. (2015): New records for the Kosovo caddisfly fauna with the description of a new species, Drusus dardanicus sp. nov. (Trichoptera: Limnephilidae). Zootaxa 4032 (5): 551-568, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4032.5.
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