Artigo Revisado por pares

The Trichoptera of Panama XXI. Review of the genus Tizatetrichia Harris, Flint, and Holzenthal, 2002 (Trichoptera: Hydroptilidae), including two new species, one first country record, and female description of T. panamensis Harris and Armitage, 2019

2023; Taylor & Francis; Volume: 45; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1080/01650424.2023.2221237

ISSN

1744-4152

Autores

Brian J. Armitage, Steven C. Harris, Yusseff Aguirre,

Tópico(s)

Invertebrate Taxonomy and Ecology

Resumo

AbstractAbstractThe genus Tizatetrichia Harris, Flint, and Holzenthal, 2002 Harris, S.C., Flint, O.S., Jr., and Holzenthal, R.W. (2002), ‘Two New Genera of Hydroptilidae from the Neotropics (Trichoptera: Hydroptilidae: Stactobiini)’, Journal of the New York Entomological Society, 110, 49–64.2.0.CO;2][Crossref] , [Google Scholar] (Trichoptera: Hydroptilidae) was described based on a single male of T. costatricensis Harris, Flint, and Holzenthal, 2002 Harris, S.C., Flint, O.S., Jr., and Holzenthal, R.W. (2002), ‘Two New Genera of Hydroptilidae from the Neotropics (Trichoptera: Hydroptilidae: Stactobiini)’, Journal of the New York Entomological Society, 110, 49–64.2.0.CO;2][Crossref] , [Google Scholar] collected from Guanacaste Province in northwestern Costa Rica. Since then, the second species (T. panamensis Harris and Armitage, 2019 Harris, S.C., and Armitage, B.J. (2019), ‘The Trichoptera of Panama. X. The Quebrada Rambala Drainage, with Description of 19 New Species of Microcaddisfies (Trichoptera: Hydroptilidae)’, Insecta Mundi, 0707, 1–54. [Google Scholar]) was discovered in a small Caribbean drainage near Chiriquí Grande, Panama. No female of this genus had been described. Recent collections carried out by the Aquatic Invertebrate Research Group (AIRG) at the Universidad Autónoma de Chiriquí (UNACHI) now expand our knowledge of this genus. Herein, we describe a female of Tizatetrichia for the first time, comparing it with that of the related genus Bredinia Flint, 1968 Flint, Jr., O. S. (1968), ‘Bredin-Archbold-Smithsonian Biological Survey of Dominica, 9. The Trichoptera (Caddisflies) of the Lesser Antilles’, Proceedings of the United States National Museum, 125, 1–36.[Crossref] , [Google Scholar]. In addition, we describe two new species from central and western Panama (T. escabrosa sp. n. and T. paloseco sp. n.), report one first country record (T. costaricensis), provide keys to the identification of Stactobiinae genera and Tizatetrichia species, and discuss the distribution of the genus in relation to altitude. Panama is now the home to all four species of this Neotropical genus, and its endemic status expanded to Central America. The Republic of Panama has 490 species of caddisflies distributed among 15 families and 56 genera.Keywords: neotropicsbiological diversityhydroptilidsStactobiinae AcknowledgmentsWe are grateful to the Ministerio de Ambiente (MiAmbiente) of Panama for all collection permits and import/export licenses employed. Additionally, we acknowledge MiAmbiente, which financed the collection of one species in the Santa Fe National Park, through the Sustainable Production System and Biodiversity Conservation Project (PSPSCB), based on funding from the World Bank. We are also grateful to COZEM of the Gorgas Memorial Institute of Health Studies, who led the aquatic macroinvertebrate field component of the PSPSCB project, as well as Tomás Ríos, Edgar Álvarez, and Carlos Nieto, who assisted with the field collections, and Aydeé Cornejo, who served as supervisor. We are also appreciative of Tatiana I. Arefina-Armitage for editing the manuscript. We thank Patricia Kieswetter and John Jones, owners of Finca la Esperanza, for their permission to sample Afluente sin nombre de Río Gariche and Quebrada la Vuelta on their property. We are also grateful to Deborah Eisberg for her support of our research and are indebted to Albert Thurman for his collecting effort, logistical help, and friendship. Special thanks to Leah Keth and Tatiana I. Arefina-Armitage for their artistic skills in generating the illustrations for the new species. Finally, we thank Dr Helena Shaverdo, Chief Editor of Aquatic Insects, and several anonymous reviewers who collectively worked to make this a better manuscript.Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.Additional informationFundingSupport for national park fieldwork came from Panama’s Ministerio de Ambiente (MiAmbiente), funded by a grant from the World Bank. Funding for this project and report was made possible thanks to support to Dr Brian J. Armitage by the Sistema Nacional de Investigación (SNI) of Secretaría Nacional de Ciencia, Tecnología e Innovación (SENACYT), Panama.

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