identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
2355E37A0E0258E7A9F4801B979449E0.text	2355E37A0E0258E7A9F4801B979449E0.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Cylindrotoma americana Osten Sacken 1865	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
    <body>
        <div>
            <p> Cylindrotoma americana Osten Sacken, 1865, stat. reval.</p>
            <p>Figs 6N, O, P, 7K</p>
            <p> Cylindrotoma juncta Coquillett, 1900 </p>
            <p> Cylindrotoma splendens Doane, 1900 </p>
            <p> Cylindrotoma pallescens Alexander, 1931. </p>
            <p>Non-type material examined.</p>
            <p>Canada • 1 ♂; British Columbia, Cowichan Valley, Upper Carmanah Valley; 48.616°N, 124.733° W; alt. 95 m; 4 Jul. 1991 - 15 Aug. 1991; N. Winchester leg.; CKLP. • 1 ♀; British Columbia, Cowichan Valley, Upper Carmanah Valley; 48.67°N, 124.69° W; alt. 160 m; 4 Jul. 1991 - 15 Aug. 1991; N. Winchester leg.; CKLP. Usa • 1 ♂, 1 ♀; Alaska, Juneau; 58.37°N, 134.54° W; alt. 330 m; 14 Jun. 1988; F. Brodo leg.; CKLP.</p>
            <p>Comparative diagnosis.</p>
            <p> General appearance, colouration, antennal structure, and male and female terminalia are very similar to  C. distinctissima . Differences: only the ventral margin of the inner gonocoxal lobe are sclerotised (Fig. 6N) (the lateral margin is also sclerotised in  C. distinctissima (Fig. 6D, E). Sheath of aedeagus shorter and wider (Fig. 6P) than in  C. distinctissima (Fig. 6L, M). Aedeagus does not narrow to the tip in this species, the lateral margin being almost straight (Fig. 6P) (in  C. distinctissima the aedeagus clearly narrows to the tip, starting from around the middle in Japanese specimens (Fig. 6M). Spermathecae small (Fig. 7K), diameter ~ 0.07-0.1 of the width of sternite 8 (in  C. distinctissima relatively large, 0.15-0.2 of the width of sternite 8). </p>
            <p> For a detailed species description see Brodo (1967) under "  Cylindrotoma distinctissima americana ". </p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p>Widely distributed species in Nearctic, known from Canada and USA (Alaska to Oregon and Colorado, in the east from Labrador and Newfoundland to Ontario and Pennsylvania) (Oosterbroek 2021).</p>
        </div>
    </body>
</html>
	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/2355E37A0E0258E7A9F4801B979449E0	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Kolcsar, Levente-Peter;Paramonov, Nikolai;Imada, Yume;Kato, Daichi;Gamboa, Maribet;Shinoka, Dai;Kato, Makoto;Watanabe, Kozo	Kolcsar, Levente-Peter, Paramonov, Nikolai, Imada, Yume, Kato, Daichi, Gamboa, Maribet, Shinoka, Dai, Kato, Makoto, Watanabe, Kozo (2022): Notes on the taxonomic status and distribution of some Cylindrotomidae (Diptera, Tipuloidea), with emphasis on Japanese species. ZooKeys 1083: 13-88, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1083.75624, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1083.75624
565C6AA8CC185836B8F3EABE25232A20.text	565C6AA8CC185836B8F3EABE25232A20.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Cylindrotoma distinctissima (Meigen 1818)	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
    <body>
        <div>
            <p> Cylindrotoma distinctissima (Meigen, 1818)</p>
            <p>Figs 3, 4A, 5A, 6, 7, 8A</p>
            <p> Tipula brevicornis (Zetterstedt, 1838) </p>
            <p> Cylindrotoma tenebrarum Krogerus, 1937 </p>
            <p> Cylindrotoma distinctissima borealis Peus, 1952 </p>
            <p> Cylindrotoma japonica Alexander, 1919, syn. nov.; Alexander 1919: 344-345: original description; Alexander 1924: 595: faunistic records; Alexander 1928: 9: distribution, illustrations; Esaki 1950: 1513: illustration; Ishida 1955: 77: distribution; Takahashi 1960: 81: distribution; Alexander 1966: 122: distribution, faunistic records; Sidorenko 1999: 68-70: identification key, illustration, distribution; Nakamura 2001: 23-29: identification key, illustration, distribution, faunistic records; Pilipenko and Sidorenko 2004: 12 faunistic records; Boldgiv 2006: phylogeny, faunistic records; in Paramonov 2006 as  Cylindrotoma distinctissima japonica : 888: stat. nov., identification key, illustration, distribution; Gelhaus et al. 2007: 64 comparison; Sasakawa 2008: 131: faunistic records; Nakamura 2014: 54: distribution; Kato and Suzuki 2017: 16: faunistic records, distribution; Imada 2020: biology and ecology of larvae. </p>
            <p> Cylindrotoma distinctissima alpestris Peus, 1952, syn. nov.: Peus 1952: original description. </p>
            <p>Type material examined.</p>
            <p> Cylindrotoma japonica Alexander, 1919: Paratype. Japan • ♀; Saitama Pref., Saitama; 31 May 1919; R. Takahashi leg.; USNM. </p>
            <p>Non-type material examined.</p>
            <p> Cylindrotoma distinctissima distinctissima (Meigen, 1818): Finland • 1 ♂;  Vieremä , Mammonhauta; 63.924404°N, 26.869023°E; alt. 135; 18 Jun. 2008 - 13 Jul. 2008; J. Salmela leg.; CKLP. Russia • 1 ♂, 1 ♀; Krasnodar Krai, Apsheronsky District, Mezmay Settlement, Kamyshanova polyana, Mezmaika River; 44.16989°N, 40.05181°E; alt. 1200 m; 11 Jun. 2004; N.M. Paramonov leg.; CKLP. </p>
            <p> Cylindrotoma japonica Alexander, 1919: Japan • 1 ♂; Mt. Shirouma Alps, 36.78°N, 137.7°E; 8 Aug. 1931; J. Machida leg.; USNM. • 1 ♀; Aomori, Towada, Sakura Spa, Okuse; 40.627315°N, 140.909831°E; alt. 854 m; 21 Jun. 2014, D. Kato leg.; BLKU. • 1 ♂, 1 ♀; Aomori, Nishimeyamura, Okawa Path, Kawaratai; 40.500625°N, 140.204058°E; alt. 300 m; 18 Sep. 2013; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. • 1 ♂, reared from larva; Gifu, Takayama, Nigorikawa; 36.0545°N, 137.55818°E; 1375 m; larva collected: 5 Aug. 2015, emerged: 26 May. 2015; M. Kato leg.; CYI. • 1 ♂; Gifu, Mt. Norikura, Japanese Alps; 36.12°N, 137.5°E; 26 Jun. 1929; J. Machida leg.; USNM. • 1 ♀; Hokkaido, Sapporo, Minami-ku, Jozankei, trail of Mt. Sapporo; 42.92392°N, 141.17688°E; alt. 450-860 m; 3 Sep. 2018; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. • 2 ♂, 3 ♀; Hokkaido, Higashikawa, Asahidake, River Yukomabetsu; 43.65226°N, 142.80229°E; alt. 1120 m; 23 Jul. 2019; L.-P.  Kolcsár leg.; CKLP. • 2 ♂; Hokkaido, Higashikawa, Asahidake; 43.65582°N, 142.82608°E; alt. 1100-1500 m; 24 Jul. 2019; L.-P.  Kolcsár , leg.; CKLP. • 1 ♂; Hokkaido, Ashoro, Meakan Moutain, small sandy/muddy stream; 43.3907°N, 143.96821°E; alt. 365 m; 27 Jul. 2019; L.-P.  Kolcsár leg.; CKLP. • 1 ♀; Iwate, Hachimantai, Toshiti Spa; 39.94253°N, 140.86804°E; alt. 1344 m; 3 Aug. 2013; • 1 ♀; same locality; 1 Jul. 2014; • 1 ♂; same locality; 5 Aug. 2014; • 2 ♀; same locality; 20 Sep. 2014; • 1 ♀; same locality; 5 Aug. 2015; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. • 3 ♂; Nagano, Matsumoto, Azumi, Mt. Norikura, near Kuraigahara-Sansou; 36.11987°N, 137.5692°E; alt. 2370 m; 22 Jul. 2016; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. • 1 ♂; Nagano, Ueda, Daimyozin stream, Sugadaira MRC; 36.51992°N, 138.3539°E; alt. 1315 m; 27 Aug. 2012; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. • 2 ♂; Nagano, Sakae-mura, Sakai, Koakazawa-gawa River; 36.85352°N, 138.66358°E; alt. 1320-1600 m; 19. Sep. 2019; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. • 1 ♂; Nagano, Chino, Shibunoyu; 36.03582°N, 138.32771°E; alt. 1863 m; 21 Jul. 2013; M. Kato leg.; CYI. • 2 ♂; Nagano, Miyada, Kisokomagatake; 35.76917°N, 137.8357°E; alt. 1683 m; 13 Aug. 2013; M. Kato leg.; CYI. • 1 ♂; Nagano, Matsumoto, Kamikouchi; 36.20966°N, 137.60662°E; alt. 1320 m; 3 Aug. 2014; M. Kato leg.; CYI. • 1 ♀; Niigata, Yuzawa, Mitsumata, Mt. Naeba; 36.85616°N, 138.71041°E; alt. 1500-1900 m; 8 Aug. 2019; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. • 1 ♂; Niigata, Kurokawa, Echigo; 38.05°N, 139.47°E; 19 May 1954; B. Kintaro leg.; USNM. • 1 ♀; Okayama, Maniwa, Hiruzen-Shimotokuyama; 35.32931°N, 133.59725°E; alt. 784 m; 17 May. 2015; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. • 2 ♀; Tokyo, Tokyo, Akiruno, rocky river and stream; 35.74766°N, 139.18466°E; alt. 288 m; 11 May. 2019; L.-P.  Kolcsár leg.; CKLP. • 1 ♂; Tokyo, Tokyo, Mitake; 35.78°N, 139.14°E; 10 May. 1931; B. Oda leg.; USNM. • 1 ♂; Toyama, Kurobegoro; 36.38°N, 137.47°E; 8 Aug. 1931; Imanishi leg.; USNM. • 1 ♀; Yamagata, Yonezawa, Shirabu-onsen; 37.77646°N, 140.11964°E; alt. 888 m; 26 Jun. 2015; Y. Imada leg.; CYI. Russia • 1 ♂; Saghalien [Far East, Sakhalin Oblast], Shimizu; 1922.07.27, T. Esaki leg.; USNM. </p>
            <p>Redescription.</p>
            <p>Colouration very variable, base colour whitish yellow to dark orange, with pale brown to black markings.</p>
            <p> Head. Vertex and occiput with dark area, size variable among specimens, larger on "  Cylindrotoma borealis " and "  Cylindrotoma japonica " form; yellowish around eye (Fig. 3C, D, F). Rostrum short, yellow to brown, without nasus, but with tuft of hairs (Fig. 3F, E). Palpus five segmented, last segment 2  × longer than penultimate segment. Antenna yellowish brown to black (Fig. 3F, E); scape short, as long as wide; pedicel short, subspherical to drop-shaped; flagellum 14 segmented (Fig. 4A). Flagellar segments simple in both sexes, not expanded ventrally, covered with dense, whitish setae (sensilla), especially in ventral side (Figs 3E, F, 4A); sensilla less dense in female; first flagellomere longer than second in both sexes; verticels black, relatively long. </p>
            <p> Thorax. Whitish yellow to dark orange, with contrasting black marks. Cervical sclerites brown to black. Pronotum pale in middle, darker laterally (Fig. 3B, C, D). Mesonotal pattern variable, from three longitudinal, pale brown ("  Cylindrotoma alpestris " form) to black (the typical "  Cylindrotoma distinctissima " form Fig. 3C) markings to one large patch ("  Cylindrotoma japonica " form Fig. 3D); longitudinal mesonotal suture distinct, formed by deep groove (Fig. 3C, D). Scutellum yellow, triangular (Fig. 3C, D). Mediotergite yellow, posterior part black (Fig. 3B). Anepisternum and katepisternum separated, both darker ventrally (Fig. 3B). Katatergite yellow, black above posterior spiracle, with creases. Coxa base yellow to pale brown, apically yellow, trochanter yellowish (Fig. 3B); femur and tibia yellowish, with distinct and wide, black ring at tip; tarsus uniformly black. Stem of halter yellow, knob usually darker. Wing hyaline, with yellowish brown to brown tinge; veins brown to black; pterostigma brown to black (Fig. 5A); wing membrane with interference patterns, visible with dark background (Fig. 3A). Four branches of M reaching wing margin. Cell a2 less than 6  × longer than wide. </p>
            <p> Abdomen. Yellow ("  Cylindrotoma alpestris " form) to almost black ("  Cylindrotoma japonica " form); gradually lightening caudally, without clear pattern or with narrow longitudinal line medially. </p>
            <p>Male terminalia. Black, directed dorsally (Fig. 3A). Tergite 9 partly fused with gonocoxite (Fig. 6C). Caudal margin of tergite 9 with deep V-shaped notch at middle (Fig. 6A); posterior edge of tergite 9 forming dorsal and ventral portion in lateral view (Fig. 6C), shapes variable among specimens. Gonocoxite fused with sternite 9 (Fig. 6B, C); gonocoxite with ventral crescent-shaped lobe (Fig. 6A, B: vl); apical lobe of gonocoxite (al) prominent, well separated, directed inward; both ventral and inner lateral margins sclerotised, shape variable (Fig. 6A, D, E). Gonostylus undivided; twisted, widening in caudal view, shape variable among and within population(s) (Fig. 6F, Japan; Fig. 6G, Finland). Interbase small, without membranous or sclerotised lobe between interbases (Fig. 6H, I). Aedeagus dorsoventrally flattened, gently curved dorsally (Fig. 6J), gradually narrowing to tip, shape variable among and within population(s) (Fig. 6H, I, L, Japan; Fig. 6M, Finland); tip divided into three short, nearly equal tubes in last 1/4 of its length (Fig. 6L, M). Spines on lateral branch of aedeagus small, indistinct (Fig. 6K).</p>
            <p>Female terminalia. Brown to black, strongly sclerotised (Fig. 3G). Tergite 8 separated in middle by membranous area (Fig. 7A). Tergite 9 larger than tergite 8 in lateral view (Fig. 7B). Tergite 10 with elongated Y-shaped projection, shape variable among specimens (Fig. 7A, Japan; Fig. 7C, Russia (Krasnodar Krai), Fig. 7D, Finland). Cercus with serrate, cutting edge on inner-dorsal surface (Fig. 7A, B). Hypogynial valve on dorsal side with bulbous or triangular projection near middle, shape variable within specimens (Fig. 7B, F); distal part of hypogynial valve narrowing to tip. Three, relatively large spermathecae present, diameter ~ 0.15-0.2 of wide of sternite 8; duct of spermatheca straight or curved (Fig. 7I, J). Sperm ducts simple, without darkened areas (Fig. 7H). Sternite 10 with a small notch at tip, less sclerotised at midline (Fig. 7G).</p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p> Widely distributed species in Palearctic, known from: Austria, Belarus, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Rep., Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Great Britain, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Kazakhstan, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Mongolia, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Romania, Russia (North European territory, Central European territory, South European territory, West Siberia (Altay), Far East (Kamchatka Krai, Primorsky Krai, Sakhalin Oblast (incl. Kuril I), Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Ukraine, and Turkey (Paramonov and Lobkova 2013; Devyatkov 2021; Oosterbroek 2021). Distribution records of  C. japonica transferred to  C. distinctissima : Mongolia and Japan (Hokkaido I, Honshu I, and Kyushu I) (Fig. 8A). </p>
            <p>Comments.</p>
            <p> The species was originally described 250 years ago from Europe, where it is among the most widespread of cylindrotomines. The colour polymorphisms of  C. distinctissima have been described as separate species or subspecies. Peus (1952) separated three subspecies, the nominate subspecies  C. d. distinctissima (Meigen, 1818), widespread in Europe,  C. d. borealis Peus, 1952 from Norway, and  C. d. alpestris Peus, 1952 from Italian Alps. Later,  Cylindrotoma d. borealis was raised to species rank based on the generally darker habitus and slightly different genital characters (Salmela and Autio 2007). As the COI gene  sequence’s genetic distance between  C. d. distinctissima and  C. borealis was low, the species was later synonymised with  C. d. distinctissima (Salmela 2013). In our ML tree,  C. borealis sequences were also not separated from  C. d. distinctissima sequences.  Cylindrotoma d. alpestris was treated as species in CCW (2018-2021), because it showed the sympatric distribution with  C. d. distinctissima in Alps (Italy). This subspecies was designated based on very pale colouration, compared with the nominative subspecies, but the male terminalia does not show any differentiation, which was highlighted in the original description by Peus (1952). Peus noted that this subspecies maybe just a local colour variation, as  Cylindrotoma specimens showed colour polymorphisms, especially in mountain specimens (as noted by the personal experience of N. Paramonov), but there is no genital differentiation between the two species, and therefore we synonymise  C. d. alpestris syn. nov. with  C. distinctissima . </p>
            <p> Another species related to  C. distinctissima was described from Japan. The description of  Cylindrotoma japonica Alexander, 1919, was based on the darker colouration of the thorax (Fig. 3D) (Alexander 1919). The rank of this species was first questioned by Paramonov (2006), who referred to it as a subspecies of  C. distinctissima in his identification key of The  Cylindrotomidae of Far East Russia. Our morphological and genetic comparisons suggest that  C. japonica does not differ significantly from  C. distinctissima , even at the subspecies level. The colouration of  C. japonica shows a high level of variability in Japan. The specimens collected in Hokkaido Island, have, typically, three separated black marks on the mesonotum (Fig. 3C). Small genital differences occur between the typical examples of  C. distinctissima and  C. japonica , in the shape of the apical gonocoxal lobe (rectangular in Japanese specimens (Fig. 6D) and less sclerotised and rounded in studied European specimens Fig. 6E), the shape of aedeagus (evenly narrowing in Japanese specimens Figure 6L, and broader at the middle in examined European specimens Fig. 6M), as well as the shape of the gonostylus in caudal view (Fig. 6F, G). However, these also show variability amongst specimens (see illustrations by Peus 1952: fig. 27; Salmela and Autio 2007; figs 1e, 2b, e).  Ujvárosi et al. (2011: fig. 2) illustrated the high variability level of the ventral lobe of the gonocoxite in Bulgarian and Romanian populations in the case of  C. d. distinctissima , but we did not find that similar variability in  C. japonica specimens examined.  C. japonica syn. nov. and  C. distinctissima are now synonymised based on the high colour variability level, the minimal genital differences, and the small genetic differentiation between the species. </p>
            <p> Four species of  Cylindrotoma have been described from the Nearctic, which are related to  C. distinctissima , namely  C. americana Osten Sacken, 1865,  C. juncta Coquillett, 1900,  C. splendens Doane, 1900, and  C. pallescens Alexander, 1931. After the revision of North American  Cylindrotomidae , these later three species were synonymised with  C. americana , and the latter species was treated as a subspecies of  C. distinctissima as  C. distinctissima americana Osten Sacken, 1865, as their male terminalia were highly similar to each other (Brodo 1967). Molecular analysis shows a relatively high (~ 4.6%) genetic distance between the Nearctic and Palearctic subspecies, and a slight genital difference between these two clades was found in our study (see below the comparative diagnosis of  C. americana ). Based upon the two  subspecies’ genetic and geographic separation, the two subspecies are now raised to species rank,  C. americana stat. reval. and  C. distinctissima . Furthermore, the Nearctic  C. americana shows an additional molecular differentiation, as specimens from Jasper National Park, Alberta, Canada were found to belong to a separate barcode BIN (BOLD:ABA1601), and the remaining sequences, both from western and eastern parts of North America represent another barcode BIN (BOLD:AAV1805). The phylogenetic relationship between these clades is not resolved in the molecular tree and lowly supported (Bootstrap: 65) in our analysis. </p>
        </div>
    </body>
</html>
	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/565C6AA8CC185836B8F3EABE25232A20	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Kolcsar, Levente-Peter;Paramonov, Nikolai;Imada, Yume;Kato, Daichi;Gamboa, Maribet;Shinoka, Dai;Kato, Makoto;Watanabe, Kozo	Kolcsar, Levente-Peter, Paramonov, Nikolai, Imada, Yume, Kato, Daichi, Gamboa, Maribet, Shinoka, Dai, Kato, Makoto, Watanabe, Kozo (2022): Notes on the taxonomic status and distribution of some Cylindrotomidae (Diptera, Tipuloidea), with emphasis on Japanese species. ZooKeys 1083: 13-88, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1083.75624, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1083.75624
1F0BE019A01550FF9AF56E507E25B426.text	1F0BE019A01550FF9AF56E507E25B426.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Cylindrotoma nigriventris Loew 1849	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
    <body>
        <div>
            <p> Cylindrotoma nigriventris Loew, 1849</p>
            <p>Figs 9, 10</p>
            <p>Non-type material examined.</p>
            <p>Finland • 1 ♂; Lohja, Karkola; 60.60841°N, 23.95901°E; alt. 125 m; 9 Jun. 2018; E. Viitanen leg.; CKLP. Russia • 1 ♂; Altai Republic, Ongudaysky District, Onguday, Seminsky Pass; 51.06°N, 85.59°E; alt. 1650 m; 27 Jun. 2016 - 30 Jun. 2016; N.E. Vikhrev leg.; CKLP. • 1 ♀; Altai Republic, Kupchegen Settlement, Chike-Taman Pass; 50.64477°N, 86.3117°E; alt. 1266 m; 28 Jun. 1964; E.P. Narchuk leg.; CKLP.</p>
            <p>Supplementary description.</p>
            <p> Male terminalia: Directed dorsally. Tergite 9 partly fused with gonocoxite (Fig. 9C). Posterior margin of tergite 9 with deep, U-shaped notch (Fig. 9A). Posterior edge of tergite 9 forming dorsal and ventral portion in lateral view (Fig. 9C). Ventral part produced caudally, forming finger-like lobe, covered by long hairs; dorsal portion wavy, formed by posterior margin of tergite 9 (Fig. 9C); lateral part of dorsal portion bent under tergite 9, forming a gently curved plate, covered with few fine setae, visible in caudal view. Gonocoxite fused with sternite 9 (Fig. 9B, C); sternite 9 sclerotised with few long hairs. Gonocoxite ventral lobe, laterally flattened, directed dorso-laterally, shape as in Fig. 9D; apical lobe of gonocoxite directed caudally, not inward as in  C. distinctissima or  C. americana ; covered by long hairs, except small bare portion at base, next to gonostylus, visible in ventral view (Fig. 9B). Gonostylus undivided, twisted; base wide, with a small gently curved finger-like lobe directed inward; inner ventral part paler, slightly membranous; in caudal view medially with outgrowth ridge (Fig. 9E); gonostylus narrowing to tip in caudal view. Interbase small, without membranous median part (Fig. 9F). Aedeagus dorsoventrally flattened, gently curved dorsally (Fig. 9H), tip divided into three short, equal tubes in last 1/4 of its length (Fig. 9F, G). Spines on inner side of lateral branch of aedeagus large, distinct, forming spike-like outgrowth (Fig. 9I); in lateral view individual spine can be separated (Fig. 9H). </p>
            <p> Female terminalia: (Fig. 10A). Very similar to terminalia of  C. distinctissima and  C. americana stat. reval. The only clear difference is the sclerotisation of lateral sperm ducts (Fig. 10B), corresponding to the position of large spines on lateral branches of aedeagus (Fig. 9I). Spermathecae small (Fig. 10C), diameter ~ 0.08-0.12  × width of sternite 8 (in inner dorsal view). </p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p> Palearctic species, distributed from Finland to Far East Russia. Reported from Finland, Kazakhstan, Mongolia, and Russia: North European Russia, West Siberia (Altai Republic), East Siberia (Irkutsk Oblast), Far East Russia (Sakhalin Oblast, Primorsky Krai) (Oosterbroek 2021). The species was reported from the Altai Republic (Russia) by  Soós and Oosterbroek (1992), but without any collection data, here we publish the first confirmatory record from the Altai Republic. </p>
            <p>Comments.</p>
            <p> Besides the apparent terminal differences in male specimens, the only distinct difference between  C. nigriventries ,  C. distinctissima , and  C. americana stat. reval. noted in our study, was the colouration of the scutellum, which is yellow in the latter two species, and with a median brown stripe or patch in  C. nigriventries . Salmela and Autio (2007) and Gelhaus et al. (2007) note that these species also differ in the colouration of the abdomen (dark brown, almost black in  C. nigriventries , and yellowish brown in  C. distinctissima ), however, some of the Japanese species of  C. distinctissima have a very dark brown abdomen (Fig. 3A). The illustration of the female terminalia of  C. nigriventris by Gelhaus et al. (2007: fig. 9) shows a high similarity to the drawing of the female terminalia of  C. distinctissima by Peus (1952: fig. 21b), making the former suspect. </p>
        </div>
    </body>
</html>
	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/1F0BE019A01550FF9AF56E507E25B426	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Kolcsar, Levente-Peter;Paramonov, Nikolai;Imada, Yume;Kato, Daichi;Gamboa, Maribet;Shinoka, Dai;Kato, Makoto;Watanabe, Kozo	Kolcsar, Levente-Peter, Paramonov, Nikolai, Imada, Yume, Kato, Daichi, Gamboa, Maribet, Shinoka, Dai, Kato, Makoto, Watanabe, Kozo (2022): Notes on the taxonomic status and distribution of some Cylindrotomidae (Diptera, Tipuloidea), with emphasis on Japanese species. ZooKeys 1083: 13-88, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1083.75624, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1083.75624
6FC196345F8D530AAE799175863D5D60.text	6FC196345F8D530AAE799175863D5D60.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Diogma caudata Takahashi 1960	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
    <body>
        <div>
            <p> Diogma caudata Takahashi, 1960</p>
            <p>Figs 4B, 5C, 8B, 11, 12, 13</p>
            <p> Diogma caudata in Takahashi 1960: 82-84: original description; Siitonen 1984: 203: faunistic record; Sidorenko 1999: 68-70: identification key, illustration, distribution; Oosterbroek et al. 2001: 122: distribution; Paramonov 2004a: 258: faunistic record; Paramonov 2005: 211: comparison; Mukkala et al. 2005: 7: faunistic record; Bartsch et al. 2005: red list status, faunistic record; Paramonov 2006: 888-889: identification key, illustration, distribution; Polevoi 2006: 96: faunistic records;  Sandström 2008: red list status; Salmela 2008: 12: ecology; Salmela 2012a: 242: distribution; Salmela 2012b: 16: distribution; Salmela and  Petrašiūnas 2014: 31: checklist; Nakamura 2014: 54: distribution. </p>
            <p>Type material examined.</p>
            <p> Diogma caudata Takahashi: Holotype: • ♂; Japan, Hokkaido, Mount Meakandake; 5 Jul. 1958; M. Takahashi leg.; ELUK. </p>
            <p>Non-type material examined.</p>
            <p> Finland • 3 ♂, 1 ♀; Kaavi, Kalalamminpuro; 63.11458°N, 28.67255°E; alt. 140 m; 20 Jun. 2008 - 17 Jul. 2008; J. Salmela leg.; LMM, CKLP. Russia • 1 ♂, 1 ♀; Arkhangelsk Oblast, Plesetsk District, Obozersky Settlement, around the settlement; 63.44231°N, 40.30789°E; alt. 100 m; 26 Jun. 1959; N.P. Krivosheina leg.; CKLP. • 1 ♂; Karelia Republic, Kon: 6909:550, Kondopoga District, Kivach Nature Reserve, spruce forest; 62.26766°N, 33.97975°E, alt. 42 m; 19 May. 1993 - 23 Jun. 1993; A.V. Polevoi leg.; window trap; ZIN. • 1 ♂; Karelia Republic, Karelia, Kon: 6982:570, Medvezhyegorsk Urban Settlement, 3 km NW Medvezhyegorsk City, point  № 6; 62.93364°N, 34.38467°E; alt. 130 m; 19 Jul. 2002; A.V. Polevoi leg.; ZIN. • 1 ♂; Perm Krai, Kungur Urban Okrug, Kungur City, forest station; 57.42881°N, 56.944206°E; alt. 219 m; 16 Jun. 1960; K.B. Borisova leg.; ZIN. • 1 ♂; Tuva Republic, Tandinsky District, north slope of Tannu-Ola mountains, near Chagytaj Lake; 50.99591°N, 94.6764°E; alt. 1500 m; 24 Jun. 1963; N.A. Violovich leg.; ZIN. Sweden • 2 ♂; Lule Lappmark, Kaltbacken bei Messaure; 66.67347°N, 20.32239°E; alt. 240 m; 23 Jun. 1969 - 26 Jun. 1969; • 1 ♀; same locality; 22 Jun. 1970 - 24 Jun. 1970; • 2 ♂; same locality; 23 Jun. 1971 - 30 Jun. 1971; • 31 ♂, 4 ♀; same locality; 12 Jun. 1972 - 13 Jul. 1972 / 21. Aug. 1972 - 28 Aug. 1972; • 2 ♂; same locality; 19 Jun. 1973 - 25 Jun. 1973; • 1 ♂, 1 ♀; same locality; 17 Jun. 1974 - 8 Jul. 1974; K.  Müller leg.; ZFMK. </p>
            <p>Redescription.</p>
            <p> Head. Dorsally dark brown, ventrally brown. Frons with white pubescence noticeable only in dry specimens (Fig. 11C, D). Rostrum pale brown, short, without nasus, with few hairs. Mouthparts pale brown to brown (Fig. 11C, D). Palpus pale brown to brown, short, five segmented; last segment slightly longer than penultimate segment (Fig. 11B). Scape cylindrical, 2  × as long as pedicel; pedicel ovate, slightly darker than scape; flagellum 14-segmented, gradually darkening from base to tip; segments simple in both sexes, not expanded ventrally (Figs 4B, 11E, F); in male, first flagellomere as long as wide, remaining segments cylindrical; last segment 1.2-1.3  × as long as penultimate segment; flagellomeres with short, relative sparse whitish setae (sensilla), just slightly denser in ventral and lateral sides (Fig. 11E); in female, last flagellomere 1.8-2  × as long as penultimate; last 4-6 segments without sensilla (Figs 4B, 10F). Verticels black, shorter than length of flagellomere; usually one verticel in ventral surface and two or three in dorsal/dorsolateral sides, first segment with 4-6 verticels. </p>
            <p> Thorax. General colouration yellowish brown with contrasting, shiny black markings. Mesonotum pale brown, greenish yellow in fresh, living specimen (Takahashi 1960), with three separated, broad, longitudinal black markings (Fig. 11C); several small yellow setae along pale strips. Scutellum yellow. Posterior part of mediotergite black. Anepisternum and katepisternum separated, both ventral parts dark brown to black. Ventral corner of laterotergite black. Additional small darker patch on posterior basalare, and on ventral part of meron. Coxa and trochanter yellowish, darker on anterior- dorsal parts (Fig. 11B); femur pale brown; tibia gradually darkening from pale brown to dark brown/black; tarsus uniformly black. Wing hyaline; veins pale brown to brown; pterostigma pale (Fig. 5B); three branches of M reaching wing margin; M1 in same level as M1+2; cell a2 narrow,&gt; 7  × longer than wide (Fig. 5B); membrane with interference patterns, visible with dark background (Fig. 11A). Halter monochrome, yellow or pale brown. </p>
            <p>Abdomen. Tergites and sternites pale brown to brown, tergite 8 and sternite 8 darker than others (Fig. 11A). Pleural parts greenish in living specimen (Takahashi 1960).</p>
            <p>Male terminalia: Black, large, complex, directed caudally. Tergite 9 not fused with gonocoxite, partly cover gonocoxite (Fig. 12C); medial part rounded with small tuft of hairs (Fig. 12A); lateral lobe of tergite 9 greatly extended, complex; as long as basal part of tergite 9; ventral portion of lateral lobe elongated, finger-like in lateral view (Fig. 12C); lateral margin almost straight or weakly divergent in dorsal view (Fig. 12A, B); ventral base of lateral lobe with small, black, heavily sclerotised lobe (Fig. 12C, E) - named lamina by some authors - shape variable; posterior margin of tergite 9 between median round part and lateral lobe covered with dense short, blunt ended setae (Fig. 12A). Gonocoxite complex; apical lobe with dense hairs (Fig. 12B-D); ventral lobe round, almost bare (Fig. 12B, D); inner part of gonocoxite with basally directed lobe, with hairs on margin (Fig. 12D). Gonostylus simple, wider at middle (Fig. 12F); with finger-like membranous lobe on inner side, poorly visible in dry specimens (Fig. 12G). Aedeagus bifid; aedeagus with apical branches long, curved ventrally almost in right angle, then curved in right angle posteriorly, then turn dorsally in right angle in lateral view (Fig. 12J); dorsal lobe between interbases complex, sclerotised (Fig. 12H, J); interbase with ventral projection (Fig. 12J). Sperm pump and ejaculatory apodeme small (Fig. 12H-J), covered by parameres in lateral view (Fig. 12J).</p>
            <p>Female terminalia: Brown, tip of cercus and hypopygial valve yellowish brown. Tergite 8 separated at middle by membranous area (Fig. 13A). Tergites 8 and 9 similar in size (Fig. 13B). Ventral corner of tergite 9 rugged (Fig. 13B). Triangular sclerite separated from tip of tergite 10 (Fig. 13A). Lateral lobes of tergite 10 elongated, with few longer hairs (Fig. 13A, B). Cercus and hypogynial valve simple, wide, blade-shaped, tips rounded (Fig. 13B). Dorsal apical surface of cercus rough, formed by few blunt, pyramid or round teeth (Fig. 13A, B). Base of sternite 8, weakly sclerotised, extended laterally at middle, with transverse creases (Fig. 13AC). Two round spermathecae present, duct curved (Fig. 13D). Lateral sclerite of genital fork elongated; two sperm ducts simple, without any clear markings (Fig. 13D).</p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p>Finland, Japan (Hokkaido I, Fig. 8B), Sweden, and Russia (Kareliya Republic, Perm Krai and Tuva) (Oosterbroek 2021). First records from Arkhangelsk Oblast, Russia.</p>
            <p>Comments.</p>
            <p> The species was initially described from Hokkaido, Japan. However, no additional Japanese data has been published, and the species was not found in the type locality in our study. The species later was reported from Finland, Sweden, and Russia (Karelia Republic, Perm Krai, and Tuva). Morphologically it is a well separated species from the close related  Diogma glabrata , but the Finnish specimens show only a small COI genetic difference from it and form a clade together with the West Palearctic  D. glabrata . No significant morphological differences were found between the Finnish and Russian specimens and the Japanese holotype. </p>
        </div>
    </body>
</html>
	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/6FC196345F8D530AAE799175863D5D60	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Kolcsar, Levente-Peter;Paramonov, Nikolai;Imada, Yume;Kato, Daichi;Gamboa, Maribet;Shinoka, Dai;Kato, Makoto;Watanabe, Kozo	Kolcsar, Levente-Peter, Paramonov, Nikolai, Imada, Yume, Kato, Daichi, Gamboa, Maribet, Shinoka, Dai, Kato, Makoto, Watanabe, Kozo (2022): Notes on the taxonomic status and distribution of some Cylindrotomidae (Diptera, Tipuloidea), with emphasis on Japanese species. ZooKeys 1083: 13-88, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1083.75624, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1083.75624
82A4EA5ED4E25BA3AF7B3A62067D9120.text	82A4EA5ED4E25BA3AF7B3A62067D9120.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Diogma dmitrii Paramonov 2005	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
    <body>
        <div>
            <p> Diogma dmitrii Paramonov, 2005</p>
            <p>Figs 17, 18</p>
            <p>Non-type material examined.</p>
            <p>Russia • 1 ♂; Krasnodar Krai [Republic of Adygea, Maykopsky District], Khamyshki, Lagonaki Plateau; 44.009°N, 39.994°E; alt. 1700 m; 11 Jun. 2012; N.E. Vikhrev leg.; CKLP. • 1 ♀; Krasnodar Krai, Apsheronsky District, Mezmay Settlement, Kamyshanova polyana, Mezmaika River; 44.16989°N, 40.05180°E; alt. 1200 m; 13 Jun. 2004; N.M. Paramonov leg.; CKLP.</p>
            <p>Supplementary description.</p>
            <p> Male terminalia: Medium sized and relatively simple, directed caudally. Tergite 9 fused with gonocoxite (Fig. 17C). Tergite 9 posterior margin convex in dorsal view (Fig. 17A), lateral lobe very small, triangular, ~ 1/4  ×total length of tergite 9 in lateral view (Fig. 17C); covered with relative long setae; posterior margin of tergite 9 with subhyaline, ventrally directed plate, next to lateral lobe; shape approximately triangular, covered with short pale setae (Fig. 17A). Sternite 9 fused with tergite 9 and gonocoxites, present as a narrow but continuous ring (Fig. 17A-C). Gonocoxite longer than tergite 9 in lateral view. Ventral lobe of gonocoxite well visible, without deep separation from gonocoxite (as in  D. caudata and  D. glabrata ); inner half pale, partly membranous, covered by long pale hairs (Fig. 17B); apical lobe very small, mostly bare; inner part of gonocoxite forming a plate with hairs on all surface (Fig. 17D). Membranous area between gonocoxites reach base of ventral lobe (Fig. 17B). Gonostylus simple, without lobe in inner side; claw-like in lateral view (Fig. 17D); widened in middle length in caudal view (see Fig. 17E, F from different angles), with small, rounded bulge in inner ventral base (Fig. 17E). Sperm pump and ejaculatory apodeme large, partly covered by paramere in lateral view (Fig. 17I). Dorsal lobe between interbases dorso-ventrally flattened, posterior margin almost straight, covered by dense short hairs (Fig. 17G, I); interbase simple, with a few hairs, curved dorsally, without ventral projection, (Fig. 17I). Aedeagus bifid, branches short, slightly curved dorsally; base wide, evenly narrowing to tip in lateral view (Fig. 17I). </p>
            <p>Female terminalia: Brown, tip of cercus and hypopygial valve yellowish brown. Tergite 8 separated at middle by membranous area (Fig. 18A). Tergite 8 larger than tergite 9 in lateral view (Fig. 18B). Ventral corner of tergite 9 not rugged, with few hairs (Fig. 18B). Triangular sclerite separated from tip of tergite 10, but close situated (Fig. 18A). Lateral lobes of tergite 10 finger-like with few long hairs (Fig. 18A). Cercus and hypogynial valve simple, wide, blade-shaped, tips rounded (Fig. 18B). Dorsal apical surface of cercus rough, formed by few, blunt pyramid teeth (Fig. 18B). Sternite 8 simple, without transverse creases (Fig. 18B, C). Two very large, elongated spermathecae present with duct almost straight (Fig. 18D). Two sperm ducts simple, without any clear markings, genital fork with a rod-shaped median part, posterior part pale (Fig. 18C).</p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p>Russia: North Caucasus (Krasnodar Krai, Karachay-Cherkessia Republic); Georgia, Turkey (Asiatic part: Manisa, Rize, Samsun, Trabzon) (Oosterbroek 2021).</p>
        </div>
    </body>
</html>
	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/82A4EA5ED4E25BA3AF7B3A62067D9120	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Kolcsar, Levente-Peter;Paramonov, Nikolai;Imada, Yume;Kato, Daichi;Gamboa, Maribet;Shinoka, Dai;Kato, Makoto;Watanabe, Kozo	Kolcsar, Levente-Peter, Paramonov, Nikolai, Imada, Yume, Kato, Daichi, Gamboa, Maribet, Shinoka, Dai, Kato, Makoto, Watanabe, Kozo (2022): Notes on the taxonomic status and distribution of some Cylindrotomidae (Diptera, Tipuloidea), with emphasis on Japanese species. ZooKeys 1083: 13-88, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1083.75624, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1083.75624
62F83DDAAC225F5B983C10AAF0063D1A.text	62F83DDAAC225F5B983C10AAF0063D1A.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Diogma glabrata (Meigen 1818)	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
    <body>
        <div>
            <p> Diogma glabrata (Meigen, 1818)</p>
            <p>Figs 4C, 5C, 8B, 14, 15, 16</p>
            <p> Phalacrocera megacauda in Alexander 1931: 349-350: original description. </p>
            <p> Diogma glabrata megacauda in Alexander 1949: 196: comparison; Ishida 1955: 76: distribution; Takahashi 1960: 82: distribution, comparison, illustration; Alexander 1966: 122: distribution, faunistic records; Sidorenko 1999: 68-70: identification key, illustration, distribution. </p>
            <p> Diogma glabrata (  Diogma glabrata Phalacrocera megacauda ) in Paramonov 2006: 888-889: identification key, illustration, distribution. </p>
            <p> Diogma glabrata megacauda ,  D. glabrata in Gelhaus et al. 2007: synonymy, comparison, ecology, distribution, illustration. </p>
            <p> Diogma glabrata in Nakamura 2014: 54: distribution; Imada 2020: biology and ecology of larvae. </p>
            <p>Non-type material examined.</p>
            <p> Belarus • 2 ♂, 1 ♀; Brest Oblast; Kamenets District, Belavezhskaya Pushcha National Park; 52.58807°N, 23.81746°E; alt. 160 m; 4 Aug. 1961; E.P. Narchuk leg.; ZIN. Denmark • 1 ♂;?Upilbo; 27 Jul. 1917; P. Nielsen leg.; USNM. Estonia • 1 ♀; Ida-Viru County,  Narva-Jõesuu Town [Gungerburg]; 59.45°N, 28.03°E; 18 Jul. 1909; A.I. Chekini leg.; ZIN. Finland • 1 ♂, 2 ♀; Pihtipudas, Valkeispuro; 63.41082°N, 26.05336°E; alt. 170 m; 12 Jul. 2008 - 14 Aug. 2008; J. Salmela leg.; Malaise trap; LMM. • 1 ♂; Luvia, Niemenkyla; 61.39108°N, 21.56586°E; 12 m; 18 Jul. 2012; E. Viitanen leg.; CKLP. • 1 ♂; Mustasaari, Valassaaret; 63.43103°N, 21.07421°E; alt. 1 m; 2 Jul. 2019; E. Viitanen leg.; CKLP. • 1 ♀; Virolahti, Kurkela; 60.56858°N, 27.83847°E; alt. 8 m; 25 Jul. 2016; E. Viitanen leg.; CKLP. • 1 ♀; Fennia, Kb: 698:72, Ilomantsi, Tapionaho; 62.86016°N, 31.48371°E; alt. 190 m; 7 Jul. 1993 - 28 Jul. 1993; J.B. Jakovlev leg.; ZIN. • 1 ♀; Sotkamo, Iso-Matojarvi, Window trap  № 3, Kn: 7086:590; 63.86638°N, 28.85971°E; alt. 210 m; 1 Jul. 1997 - 14 Jul 1997; Kuussaari leg.; ZIN. Japan • 2 ♂; Hokkaido, Higashikawa, Asahidake, River Yukomabetsu; 43.65226°N, 142.80229°E; alt. 1120 m; 23 Jul. 2019; L.-P.  Kolcsár leg.; CKLP. • 4 ♂, 1 ♀; Hokkaido, Shari, Shiretoko Pass; 44.05331°N, 145.10166°E; alt. 716 m; 26 Jul. 2019; L.-P.  Kolcsár leg.; CKLP. • 1 ♂; Iwate, Hachimantai, Toshiti Spa; 39.94253°N, 140.86804°E; alt. 1344 m; 3 Aug. 2013; • 2 ♀; same locality; 5 Aug. 2015; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. • 4 ♂; Nagano, Otakimura, Mt. Ontake; 35.86894°N, 137.51421°E; alt. 1990 m; 22 Jul. 2016; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. • 1 ♂; Toyama, Toyama, Arimine Jurodani; 36.46063°N, 137.42198°E; alt. 1130 m; 28 Aug. 2009 - 1 Sep. 2009; • 1 ♀; same locality; 1 Sep. 2009 - 8 Sep. 2009; M. Watanabe leg; Malaise trap; BLKU. Latvia • 1 ♀;  Dolesmuiža , Doles sala; 56.866°N, 24.2014°E; alt. 4 m; 20 Jul. 2018; L.-P.  Kolcsár leg.; CKLP. • 1 ♂, 1 ♀; Skaistkalne, small stream; 56.411°N, 24.637°E; alt. 12 m;; L.-P.  Kolcsár leg.; birch-spruce forest; CKLP. Russia • 1 ♂; Altai Republic, Turochak District, near Artybash Settlement; 51.79299°N, 87.26535°E; alt. 430 m; 15 Jul. 2006; N.M. Paramonov leg.; ZIN. • 1 ♀; Amur Oblast, Shimanovsk District, Urochishche Samodon, 100 km W Svobodny City; 51.29°N, 126.83°E; alt. 320 m; 6 Aug. 1959; A.G. Zinovjev leg.; ZIN. • 1 ♂; Amur Oblast, Shimanovsk District, Simonovo Settlement, 75km W Svobodny City; 51.46°N, 126.98°E; alt. 305 m; 27 Jul. 1959; A.G. Zinovjev leg.; ZIN. • 1 ♂; Leningrad Oblast, Luga District, Jashhera Village; 58.89°N, 29.82°E; alt. 40 m; 23 Jul. 1963; A.A. Stackelberg leg.; ZIN. • 2 ♂, 1 ♀; Leningrad Oblast, Gobzhicy Village; 58.83°N, 30.13°E; 7 Jul. 1934 -16 Jul. 1934; A.A. Stackelberg leg.; ZIN. • 1 ♂, 2 ♀; Leningrad Oblast, Tolmachyovo Urban Locality; 58.86°N, 29.91°E, alt. 60 m; 16 Jul. 1935 - 26 Jul. 1935; A.A. Stackelberg leg.; ZIN. • 1 ♂; Leningrad Oblast, Kamenka River; 58.88°N, 29.76°E; alt. 65 m; 8 Jul. 1935; A.A. Stackelberg leg.; ZIN. • 2 ♂, 5 ♀, Leningrad Oblast, Vsevolozhsk District, Jukki Village; 60.11°N, 30.27°E; alt. 58 m; 13 Jul. 1931 - 22 Jul. 1933; A.A. Stackelberg leg.; ZIN. • 1 ♂; Leningrad Oblast, Vsevolozhsk District, Ostrovki Village; 59.81°N, 30.82°E; alt. 13 m; 21 Jun. 1906 - 22 Jun. 1906; G.G. Jakobson leg.; ZIN. • 1 ♂; Magadan Oblast, Magadan Urban Okrug, near Sokol Urban Settlement; 59.92°N, 150.71°E; alt. 177 m; 11 Jul. 2014 - 19 Jul. 2014; N.E. Vikhrev leg.; ZIN. • 2 ♀; Moscow Oblast, Naro-Fominsk District, Naro-Fominsk City, near Vostochnyy Community; 55.39094°N, 36.68878°E; alt. 195 m; 29 Jun. 2011; • 1 ♂; same locality, 29 Jun. 2014; D.I. Gavryushin leg.; ZIN. • 1 ♀; Moscow Oblast, Naro-Fominsky District, Vostochnyy [Oriental] settlement, within the settlement; 55.3741°N, 36.4984°E; alt. 205 m; 29 Jun. 2011; D.I. Gavryushin leg.; CKLP. • 1 ♂, Moscow Oblast, Naro-Fominsk, Nara River; 55.36075°N, 36.7404°E; alt. 174 m; 29. Jun. 2014; D.I. Gavryushin leg.; CKLP. • 1 ♀; Novgorod Oblast, Novgorod District, 1.5 km SE Glebovo Settlement; 58.54893°N, 31.83198°E; alt. 40 m; 2010; N.M. Paramonov leg.; ZIN. • 1 ♂; Primorsky Krai, Vladivostok City; 43.11553°N, 131.88548°E; alt. 20 m; 8 Aug. 2003; V.V. Sidorenko leg.; ZIN. • 1 ♂; Primorsky Krai, Chuguyevka District, Verchneussuri station; 44.067°N, 133.979°E; alt. 330 m; 30 Jul. 1979; A.G. Zinovjev leg.; ZIN. • 1 ♂; Primorsky Krai, Krasnoarmeysk District, Udegeyskaya Legenda National Park, apiary; 45.46052°N, 135.20451°E; alt. 700 m; 19 Jul. 2009; A.N. Ovtshinnikov leg.; ZIN. • 1 ♀; Primorsky Krai, Terney District, Terney Urban-type Settlement, Lower Serebryanka [Sanhobe] River; 45.09°N, 136.58°E; alt. 60 m; 6 Aug. 1941; K.J. Grunin leg.; ZIN. • 1 ♂; Primorsky Krai,Ussuriysk Urban Settlement, Gorno-Tajozhnoe Settlement, 25 km SE Ussuriysk; 43.69°N, 132.15°E; alt. 120 m; 3 Aug. 1963; E.P. Narchuk leg.; ZIN. • 1 ♀; Sakhalin Oblast, Severo-Kurilsky District, Kuril Islands, Paramushir Island, Rifovaya Bay; 50.4594°N, 156.0138°E; alt. 130 m; 30 Aug. 1999; A.S. Lelej, S.Y. Storozhenko leg.; ZIN. • 1 ♂; Sakhalin Oblast, Yuzhno-Kurilsk Urban Settlement, Kuril Islands, Kunashir Island, near Lagunnoe Lake; 44.062°N, 145.759°E; alt. 20 m; 25 Jul. 1955; N.A. Violovich leg.; ZIN. • 1 ♀; Sakhalin Oblast, Kuril Islands, Shikotan Island, near Malokurilskoye Village; 43.866°N, 146.827°E; alt. 30 m; 21 Aug. 1963; G.O. Krivoluckaja leg. ZIN. • 1 ♂; Sakhalin Oblast, Sakhalin Island, Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk City; 46.95°N, 142.73°E; alt. 50 m; 29 Jul. 1959; N.A. Violovich leg.; ZIN. • 1 ♀; Samara Oblast, Zhigulyovsk Urban Okrug, Zhiguli Nature Reserve, Bakhilova Polyana; 53.43543°N, 49.66252°E; alt. 45 m; 24 Jun. 2006; N.M. Paramonov leg.; ZIN. • 1 ♀; Tver Oblast, Udomlya District, 1,5 km NW Kaskovo Village; 57.98475°N, 35.03497°E; alt. 167 m; 19 Jul. 2017; A.G. Korobkov leg.; ZIN. • 1 ♂; Tver Oblast, Udomlya District, Moldino Settlement; 57.74807°N, 35.24965°E; alt. 155 m; 4 Jul. 2018; • 1 ♂; same locality; 5 Jul. 2018; A.G. Korobkov leg.; ZIN. • 1 ♂; Yaroslavl Oblast, Tutayev District, near former railway station Pustovo; 57.81438°N, 39.56016°E; alt. 122 m; 30 Jun. 2012; M.A. Klepikov leg.; pine forest, stream; ZIN. </p>
            <p>Redescription.</p>
            <p> Head. Dorsal part brown, ventral part yellowish brown (Fig. 14B, C). Frons with white to yellowish-grey pubescence, visible only in dry specimens (Fig. 14C, F). Rostrum yellowish brown, short without nasus; mouthparts pale brown to brown. Palpus pale brown to brown, 5 segmented; last segment slightly longer than penultimate segment (Fig. 14F). Scape cylindrical 1.8-2  × longer than pedicel; pedicel ovate; pedicel and scape same colour or pedicel slightly darker (Figs 4C, 14E, F); flagellum 14 segmented, gradually darkening from base to tip; flagellar segments simple in both sexes, not expanded ventrally; male flagellomere cylindrical, with short sparse whitish setae - sensilla, slightly denser in ventral and lateral sides; last segment 1.5-1.8  × longer than penultimate (Figs 4C, 14E); female flagellomeres oval to cylindrical, first 4-6 flagellomeres oval, rest of segments cylindrical, sometimes all segment elongated, cylindrical as in male; only first 8-10 flagellomeres with sensilla; last flagellomere 1.8-2.8  × longer than penultimate (Figs 4C, 14F); verticels black, shorter than length of flagellomere; generally one verticel in ventral surface and two or three in dorsal/dorsolateral sides of flagellomeres, first segment with 4-6 shorter verticels. </p>
            <p> Thorax. General colouration yellowish with contrasting, shiny black markings. Pronotum yellow, middle part pale brown. Mesonotum yellow to pale brown with three separated black markings (Fig. 14C) or one big black patch (Fig. 14D). Scutellum yellow. Posterior part of mediotergite black (Fig. 14B). Anepisternum and katepisternum well separated; ventral part of katepisternum black; ventral part of anepisternum yellowish (Japan, Fig. 14B) or pale brown to brown (Finland, Russia). Ventral part of meron pale brown (Japan, Fig. 14B) or brown to black (Finland, Russia). Laterotergite black at ventral corner. Coxa and trochanter yellow, femur pale brown; tibia gradually darkening from pale brown to dark brown/black; tarsus uniformly black; tarsomeres each with one spur. Wing hyaline; veins pale brown to brown; pterostigma pale; three branches of M reaching wing margin, M1 at same level as M1+2, cell a2 narrow,&gt; 7  × longer than wide (Fig. 5C); wing membrane with interference patterns, visible with dark background. Halter monochrome or knob darker, yellow to pale brown. </p>
            <p>Abdomen. Tergites and sternites pale brown to brown, with paler longitudinal median line, poorly visible in dry specimens. Tergites and sternites 7 and 8 darker (Fig. 14A). Pleural parts yellow to greenish yellow in living specimen.</p>
            <p>Male terminalia. Large, black directed caudally (Fig. 14A). Tergite 9 not fused with gonocoxite, partly cover gonocoxite (Fig. 15C); medial part of tergite 9 rounded, with small tuft of hairs (Fig. 15A); lateral lobe of tergite 9 greatly extended, complex, shorter than basal part of tergite 9; shape variable, rectangular to triangular in lateral view (Fig. 15C); margin wavy, especially in caudal end (Fig. 15C, see also Gelhaus et al. 2007: figs 12-15); weakly curved inward in dorsal view (Fig. 15A); ventral base of lateral lobe with small, black, heavily sclerotised lobe (named lamina by some authors) considerably variable in shape (Fig. 15E, see also, Gelhaus et al. 2007: figs 16-20, Takahashi 1960: figs 2, 3). Posterior margin of tergite 9 between median round part and lateral lobe with dense short, blunt ended setae (Fig. 15A). Gonocoxite complex; apical and ventral lobe tips rounded with hairs; inner part of gonocoxite with less defined lobe, directed apically with hairs on tip (Fig. 15D). Gonostylus simple, outer half wider (Fig. 15F), with triangular, membranous lobe at inner side, poorly visible in dry specimens (Fig. 15G). Sperm pump and ejaculatory apodeme small (Fig. 15H-J), covered by parameres in lateral view (Fig. 15J). Dorsal lobe between interbases complex, sclerotised (Fig. 15H, J); interbase with ventral projection (Fig. 15J). Aedeagus bifid, branches long, curved ventrally almost in right angle, then turned dorsally (Fig. 15J).</p>
            <p>Female terminalia. Brown, tip of cercus and hypopygial valve yellowish brown (Fig. 14G). Tergite 8 separated at middle by membranous area (Fig. 16A). Ventral corner of tergite 9 weakly rugged and with hairs (Fig. 16B). Triangular sclerite separated from tip of tergite 10 (Fig. 16A). Lateral lobe of tergite 10 relatively small, with long hairs (Fig. 16A, B). Cercus and hypogynial valve simple, wide, blade-shaped, tips rounded (Fig. 16B). Dorsal apical surface of cercus rough, formed by few blunt pyramid or round teeth (Fig. 16A, B). Base of sternite 8 sclerotised (Fig. 16B), lateral margins almost straight in ventral and inner dorsal view (Fig. 16C), with transverse creases (Fig. 16B, C). Two round spermathecae present, duct curved (Fig. 16D). Lateral sclerite of genital fork triangular, two sperm ducts simple, without any clear markings (Fig. 16C).</p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p>Austria, Belgium, Czech Rep., Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Great Britain, Ireland, Japan: Hokkaido I, Honshu I, Korea (North Korea or South Korea), Lithuania, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Romania, Slovakia, Sweden, Switzerland, and Russia (North European territory, Central European territory (Yaroslavl Oblast), Far East (Amur Oblast, Primorsky Krai, Sakhalin Oblast (Kuril Is: Kunashir I) (Oosterbroek 2021).</p>
            <p>First records from Belarus, Latvia, and Russia: Altai Republic, Amur Oblast, Novgorod Oblast, Magadan Oblast, Samara Oblast, and Kuril Islands (Shikotan I and Paramushir I). Occurrence data in Japan and surrounding areas are presented in Figure 8B.</p>
            <p>Comments.</p>
            <p> Diogma glabrata is a relatively common species in Europe, with a similar distribution to  Cylindrotoma distinctissima . However, it is rarer or seemingly absent from southern Europe (  Kolcsár et al. 2018; Oosterbroek 2021). Alexander (1931) described the species  Phalacrocera megacauda from Japan, based on the external morphological characters, without describing or illustrating the male terminalia. Later, Edwards (1938) designated a new genus,  Diogma , for  Cylindrotoma glabrata , which was previously included in  Liogma by Osten Sacken (1859). Later, Alexander (1949) moved  Phalacrocera megacauda to  Diogma and mentioned it as a subspecies of  Diogma glabrata , without detailing the difference or the reason for transferring it to subspecies rank. Takahashi (1960) illustrated the structural difference of the ventral lobe of tergite 9, called  “lamina” , between  Diogma glabrata megacauda , and  Diogma glabrata glabrata . This  lobe’s morphological variability was discussed and illustrated in detail by Gelhaus et al. (2007). They concluded that the two  D. glabrata subspecies did not significantly differ in stable features and synonymised  D. megacauda with  D. glabrata . After morphological comparisons of the Japanese specimens with the West Palearctic specimens, our conclusion is the same. Only the body colouration shows slight differences between the two groups, however, colour variation is common among different populations of  Cylindrotominae species. In this study, the European specimens are found to be genetically separated from the Japanese specimens, and the  D. caudata sequences joined the Finnish  D. glabrata clade. Additional sequences are needed for both  Diogma species, from different areas of their distribution ranges, to resolve this genetic contradiction. </p>
        </div>
    </body>
</html>
	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/62F83DDAAC225F5B983C10AAF0063D1A	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Kolcsar, Levente-Peter;Paramonov, Nikolai;Imada, Yume;Kato, Daichi;Gamboa, Maribet;Shinoka, Dai;Kato, Makoto;Watanabe, Kozo	Kolcsar, Levente-Peter, Paramonov, Nikolai, Imada, Yume, Kato, Daichi, Gamboa, Maribet, Shinoka, Dai, Kato, Makoto, Watanabe, Kozo (2022): Notes on the taxonomic status and distribution of some Cylindrotomidae (Diptera, Tipuloidea), with emphasis on Japanese species. ZooKeys 1083: 13-88, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1083.75624, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1083.75624
6E701275F1645C6ABB653E71F11A15F1.text	6E701275F1645C6ABB653E71F11A15F1.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Liogma brevipecten Alexander 1932	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
    <body>
        <div>
            <p> Liogma brevipecten Alexander, 1932</p>
            <p>Figs 4E, 5E, 19, 20, 21, 22A</p>
            <p> Liogma brevipecten in Alexander 1932: 110-111: original descriptions; Ishida 1955: 75: distribution; Takahashi 1960: 84-85: distribution, additional description, faunistic records, illustration; Sidorenko 1999: 68-70: identification key, illustration, distribution; Nakamura 2001: 23-29: identification key, illustration, distribution, faunistic records; Paramonov 2006: 888-889: identification key; Nakamura 2014: 54: distribution; Imada 2020: biology and ecology of larvae. </p>
            <p>Non-type material examined.</p>
            <p> Japan • 1 ♂, 1 ♀; Aomori, Towada, Okuse, Tsutanuma Path; 40.59084°N, 140.95705°E; alt. 468 m; 23 May. 2014; • same locality; 1 Jun. 2014; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. • 1 ♂; Ehime, Kumakogen, small valley; 33.60489°N, 132.85584°E; alt. 580 m; 19 May. 2019; L.-P.  Kolcsár leg.; CKLP. • 1 ♂; Ehime, Kumakogen, headwaters, stream; 33.56476°N, 132.93501°E; alt. 1387 m; 17 Jun. 2019; L.-P.  Kolcsár leg.; CKLP. • 1 ♂; Ehime, Saijo, spring and mosses rocks; 33.75504°N, 133.15377°E; alt. 1480 m; 5 Jun. 2019; • 2 ♂; same locality; 16 Jun. 2019; L.-P.  Kolcsár leg.; CKLP. • 1 ♂; Ehime, Wakayama, small waterfall; 33.71591°N, 133.10839°E; alt. 930 m; 18 May. 2019; L.-P.  Kolcsár leg.; CKLP. • 1 ♀; Fukuoka, Soeda, rocky streem and moss covered cliff; 33.48309°N, 130.93289°E; alt. 900 m; 21 May. 2019; L.-P.  Kolcsár leg.; CKLP. • 1 ♂; Fukui, Fukui, Mt. Ifuri; 35.96928°N, 136.4459°E; alt. 387 m; larva collected: 22 Apr. 2015, emerged: 3 May. 2015; Y. Imada leg.; CYI. • 1 ♂; Fukui, Ono, Aburazaka-touge; 35.87298°N, 136.82297°E; alt. 735 m; larva collected: 28 Apr. 2012, emerged: 3 May. 2012; M. Kato leg.; CYI. • 1 ♂; Hiroshima, Akiota, Yokogo; 34.59419°N, 132.14497°E; alt. 892 m; 18 May. 2015; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. • 1 ♂; Hokkaido, Chitose, Komukara-toge, small stream; 42.837°N, 141.7505°E; alt. 55 m; 14 Jun. 2015 - 27 Jun. 2015; N. Kuhara leg.; Malaise-trap; EUMJ. • 1 ♂; Hokkaido, Kamikawa, Aizankei; 43.73521°N, 142.7923°E; alt. 762 m; 25 Aug. 2015; M. Kato leg.; CYI. • 1 ♂, 1 ♀; Hokkaido, Sapporo, Minami-ku, Jozankei, trail of Mt. Sapporo; 42.92392°N, 141.17688°E; alt. 450-860 m; 23 Jun. 2014; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. • 1 ♀; Iwate, Hachimantai, Matsuoyoriki; 39.89958°N, 140.89155°E; alt. 1200 m; larva collected: 14 Jun. 2014, emerged: 4 Jul. 2014; Y. Imada leg.; CYI. • 2 ♂; Iwate, Hachimantai, Toshiti Spa; 39.94253°N, 140.86804°E; alt. 1344 m; 3 Aug. 2013; • 4 ♂; same locality; 15 Jul. 2014; • 1 ♀; same locality; 5 Aug. 2014; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. • 1 ♂; Kyoto, Kyoto, Kibune; 35.13681°N, 135.76622°E; alt. 458 m; larva collected: 3 Apr. 2016, emerged: 1 May. 2016; • 1 ♀; same locality; larva collected: 13 May. 2016, emerged: 20 May. 2016; Y. Imada leg.; CYI. • 1 ♂; Nagano, Ichiromata, Mt. Jonen; 36.3°N, 137.76°E; 27 Jul. 1951; Inoue leg.; USNM. • 1 ♂; Nagano, Iida, Jabora-rindo; 35.44865°N, 138.00905°E; alt. 1337 m; larva collected: 27 Apr. 2014, emerged: 6 May. 2014; M. Kato leg.; CYI. • 1 ♂; Nagano, Iida, Shirabiso-touge; 35.43801°N, 138.03053°E; alt. 1830 m; larva collected: 19 Oct. 2015, emerged: 18 Dec. 2015; Y. Imada leg.; CYI. • 1 ♀; Nagano, Sakae, Akiyama-gou; 36.85447°N, 138.64803°E; alt. 1125 m; larva collected: 3 May. 2015, emerged: 14 Apr. 2015; Y. Imada leg.; CYI. • 1 ♀; Shizuoka, Shizuoka, Tsudono; 35.08929°N, 138.35618°E; alt. 175 m; 3 May. 2015; M. Kato leg.; CYI. • 1 ♂; Tokushima, Naka, Mt. Takashiro, Kisawamura; 33.90468°N, 134.23315°E; alt. 1300 m; 16 May. 2016; M. Kato leg.; CYI. • 1 ♂; Tokushima, Yamagata, Yonezawa, Shirabu-onsen; 37.77646°N, 140.11964°E; alt. 888 m; larva collected: 19 Oct. 2013, emerged: 25 Apr. 2014; M. Kato leg.; CYI. • 1 ♀; Yamanashi, Koshu, Enzankamihagihara, Kaminichikawa Pass; 35.7316°N, 138.8321°E; alt. 1580 m; 8 Jul. 2014; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. </p>
            <p>Redescription.</p>
            <p> Head. Black with greyish pubescence (Fig. 19B-E). Rostrum short without nasus, but with patch of hairs (Fig. 19B, E); rostrum and mouthparts dark brown to black. Palpus pale brown to black, five segmented; first two segments always darker (Fig. 19E, D); last segment 1.3-1.5  × longer than penultimate. Scape cylindrical, 2  × as long as pedicel, and usually darker than pedicel; pedicel ovate; flagellum 14 segmented, gradually darkening to tip (Figs 4E, 19D, E); flagellomeres expanded ventrally in both sexes, more prominent in male (Figs 4E, 19D); only flagellomeres 2 or 3-9 extended evidently ventrally in female (Figs 4E, 19E), remaining segments elongated; last flagellomere cylindrical in both sexes; extended flagellomeres covered with dense whitish sensilla, denser on ventral side; six verticels on each flagellomere, two long verticels on dorsal surface, two verticels in lateral surface, two shorter on ventral side; first flagellomeres always bearing additional 2-4 verticels; second to sixth flagellomeres sometimes with additional one or two shorter verticels on dorsal surface. </p>
            <p> Thorax. Uniformly black with weak greyish pruinosity, except pleural area, base of wing, and halter which yellowish especially in living specimens (Fig. 19B). Scatter pale short hairs on mesonotum present, forming two lines. Anterior 1/3-1/2 of mediotergite and anterior half of pleurotergite with creases and rugoses (Fig. 19B). Trochanter yellow; femur gradually darkening apically, basal part yellowish, apically dark brown; tibia brown to dark brown; tarsus uniformly brown to black (Fig. 19A). Wing pale, tinged with brown; pterostigma brown, well defined; veins brown; three branches of M reaching wing margin; M1 at same level as M1+2, cell a2 less than 6  × longer than wide (Fig. 5E); membrane with interference patterns, visible with dark background (Fig. 19A). </p>
            <p>Abdomen. Dark brown to black (Fig. 19A). Pleura yellowish especially in females and living specimen.</p>
            <p> Male terminalia: Uniformly dark brown to black, relatively small, directed caudally (Fig. 19A). Tergite 9 fused with gonocoxite (Fig. 20C); caudal margin straight, without prominent outgrowth, only a small lateral lobe present at lateral corner (Fig. 20A, C). Sternite 9 membranous (Fig. 20B). Gonocoxite large, 1.5-1.6  × longer than tergite 9, with long ventral lobe (Fig. 20B, C); inner surface of gonocoxite simple, without lobe (Fig. 20A). Gonostylus simple, tapering to distal end. Aedeagal complex large, 1.2-1.3  × longer than gonocoxite (Fig. 20D-F); ejaculator apodeme and sperm pump large, together 1/2  × length of aedeagal complex, not covered by parameres in lateral view (Fig. 20F); tip of interbase finger-like, with round lobe dorsally in lateral view (Fig. 20F); interbase wide and rounded in dorsal view (Fig. 20D); dorsal lobe between interbases globular, membranous (Fig. 20D, F); aedeagus trifid, median branch slightly longer (Fig. 20G); sperm ducts branching from elongated portion of sperm pump, branching area dark (Fig. 20F). </p>
            <p> Female terminalia: Brown to black, end of cercus and hypogynial valve yellowish (Fig. 19F). Tergite 8 three times larger than tergite 9 (Fig. 21B), not divided medially (Fig. 21A). Tergite 9 narrow band-shaped in lateral view (Fig. 21B). Triangular sclerite relatively large, 1/4  ×length of tergite 10; sclerite separated from tip of tergite 10; lateral lobe of tergite 10 medium sized, with few long hairs (Fig. 21A, B). Cercus and hypogynial valve broad, blade-like, tips rounded (Fig. 21B). Cercus on dorsal surface close to apical end with small notch; area before notch rough, with short and dense setae, and with few short sharp teeth (Fig. 21A, B); ventral margin of cercus before mid-length with notch (Fig. 21B). Common spermathecal duct present after genital opening; sperm ducts extended, inner wall rugose (Fig. 21C); three spermathecae laterally elongated, base of duct wide, curved, suddenly tapering suddenly (Fig. 21D). </p>
            <p>Distribution. Japan (Honshu I and Kyushu I) and Russia (Far East: Sakhalin Oblast) (Oosterbroek 2021). First records from Japan: Hokkaido I and Shikoku I (Fig. 22A).</p>
            <p>Comments.</p>
            <p> This species differs from the closely related  Liogma serraticornis in details of the antennae, male and female terminalia, and colouration, though these are slight. Both sexes of this species can be separated from  L. serraticornis based upon the first flagellomere length. It is always longer than the second flagellomere in  L. serraticornis (Fig. 4F) and similar size in  L. brevipecten (Fig. 4E). The ventral extensions of the flagellomeres of male  L. brevipecten are relatively short and shout (Fig. 4E), while  L. serraticornis has more elongated flagellomeres (Fig. 4F). The  pedicel’s colouration and wing venation characters mentioned by Takahashi (1960) were not useful for species separation here because these characters show high variability levels. The two species differ in details of male and female terminalia: the ventral lobe of the gonocoxite has several pale spine-like setae in  L. serraticornis (Fig. 29B, C), whereas  L. brevipecten is without these spine-like setae (Fig. 20B, C); the middle branch of the aedeagus is longer than the lateral ones in  L. brevipecten (Fig. 20G) but shorter than the lateral branches in  L. serraticornis (Fig. 29G). The female terminalia of  L. brevipecten is narrow and long in dorsal view (Fig. 21C), but widens ventrally in  L. serraticornis (Fig. 30C). In  L. serraticornis the lateral lobes of tergite 10 are 2  × longer than wide (Fig. 30B), but only as long as wide in  L. brevipecten (Fig. 21B). Inner genital structures also show differences among the species in the spermathecae shapes (see Figs 21D, 30D) and sperm ducts. The base of the sperm duct is readily discernible in  L. brevipecten (Fig. 21C), while it is short or very poorly discernible in  L. serraticornis (Fig. 30C); and the sperm ducts house three inflated areas the shape of golf tees in  L. serraticornis (Fig. 30C), but these are much less well developed in  L. brevipecten (Fig. 21C). </p>
        </div>
    </body>
</html>
	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/6E701275F1645C6ABB653E71F11A15F1	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Kolcsar, Levente-Peter;Paramonov, Nikolai;Imada, Yume;Kato, Daichi;Gamboa, Maribet;Shinoka, Dai;Kato, Makoto;Watanabe, Kozo	Kolcsar, Levente-Peter, Paramonov, Nikolai, Imada, Yume, Kato, Daichi, Gamboa, Maribet, Shinoka, Dai, Kato, Makoto, Watanabe, Kozo (2022): Notes on the taxonomic status and distribution of some Cylindrotomidae (Diptera, Tipuloidea), with emphasis on Japanese species. ZooKeys 1083: 13-88, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1083.75624, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1083.75624
F9511990009B516C993E0AF41571BD3C.text	F9511990009B516C993E0AF41571BD3C.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Liogma mikado (Alexander 1919)	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
    <body>
        <div>
            <p> Liogma mikado (Alexander, 1919)</p>
            <p>Figs 4D, 5D, 22B, 23, 24, 25</p>
            <p> Phalacrocera mikado in Alexander 1919: 346: original description; Alexander 1928: 10: distribution, illustration; Alexander 1953a: 57: faunistic record; Ishida 1955: 77: distribution. </p>
            <p> Liogma mikado in Takahashi 1960: 85-90: new combination, distribution, faunistic records, larva and pupa description, illustrations; Sidorenko 1999: 68-70: identification key, illustration, distribution; Nakamura 2001: 23-29: identification key, illustration, distribution, faunistic records; Paramonov 2004b: 69: faunistic record; Paramonov 2006: 888-889: identification key, distribution; Nakamura 2014: 54: distribution; Kato and Suzuki 2017: 16: distribution; Paramonov 2019: 120: faunistic data; Imada 2020: biology and ecology of larvae; Kim and Bae 2020: distribution. </p>
            <p>Type material examined.</p>
            <p> Phalacrocera mikado Alexander: ALLOTYPE ♂: • Japan, Tokyo, Tokyo metropolis, 1919.04.?, leg. R. Takahashi (USNM). </p>
            <p>Non-type material examined.</p>
            <p> Japan • 2 ♀; Aichi, Toyota, Kawashimo, triburary of Yahagi River; 35.20376°N, 137.3012°E; alt. 140 m; 4 May. 2014; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. • 1 ♀; Aichi, Seto, Iwaya-cho, near Iwayada Park; 35.23957°N, 137.15084°E; alt. 300 m; 4 May. 2016; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. • 1 ♀; Aichi, Seto, Minamiazuma; 35.223213°N, 137.1131°E; alt. 150 m; 5 May. 2014; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. • 3 ♀; Aomori, Hirosaki, Koguriyama, Inekari River; 40.53658°N, 140.48701°E; alt. 170 m; 28 May 2013; • 1 ♂; same locality; 31 May. 2013; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. • 1 ♂; Aomori, Fukaura, Mt. Takanio; 40.68993°N, 140.10285°E; alt. 140 m; 11 May. 2014; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. • 1 ♂; Aomori, Hirosaki, Soma Path; 40.49479°N, 140.40231°E; alt. 392 m; 31 May. 2013; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. • Ehime, Kumakogen, River Myogadani springs, 1275 m, 33.55808°N, 132.93805°E, 2019.05.19, 2 ♂ 1 ♀, L.-P.  Kolcsár leg.; CKLP. • 5 ♂, 11 ♀; Ehime, Wakayama, Mount Ishizuchi; 33.76491°N, 133.12948°E; alt. 1600 m; 5 Jul. 2019; L.-P.  Kolcsár leg.; CKLP. • 1 ♂; Ehime, Wakayama, small waterfall and stream; 33.74519°N, 133.13714°E; alt. 1305 m; 18 May. 2019; L.-P.  Kolcsár leg.; CKLP. • 2 ♀; Ehime, Wakayama, small waterfall; 33.71591°N, 133.10839°E; alt. 930 m; 18 May. 2019; L.-P.  Kolcsár leg.; CKLP. • 2 ♂; Fukuoka, Fukuoka, Sawara-ku, Itaya, Mt. Sefuri; 33.43811°N, 130.36673°E; alt. 970 m; 2 May. 2015; • 1 ♂; same locality; 13 May. 2015; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. • 1 ♂; Fukuoka, Miyako, Saigawa-Hobashira, Notoge Pass; 33.49565°N, 130.96156°E; alt. 740 m; 22 Apr. 2016; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. • 1 ♀; Fukuoka, Soeda, rocky streem and moss covered cliff; 33.48309°N, 130.93289°E; alt. 900 m; 21 May. 2019; L.-P.  Kolcsár leg.; CKLP. • 2 ♂; Ishikawa, Hakusan, near to Hakusan National Park; 36.25869°N, 136.72558°E; alt. 678 m; 27 May. 2015; M. Kato leg.; CYI. • 1 ♀; Iwate, Nishiwaga, Mahirudake; 39.46511°N, 140.69365°E; alt. 900 m; 19 Jun. 2015; Y. Imada leg.; CYI. • 1 ♂; Niigata, Echigo, Sugatani, Kitakanbara; 37.84°N, 139°E; 8 May. 1955; H. Koike leg.; USNM. • 1 ♀; Saitama, Ogano, Mt. Futago; 36.06994°N, 138.86753°E; alt. 942 m; larva collected: 28 Nov. 2014, emerged 15 Dec. 2014; M. Kato leg.; CYI. • 1 ♀; Shizuoka, Aoi-ku, Umegashima, Akamizu; 35.27455°N, 138.32731°E; alt. 680 m; larva collected: 8 Jan. 2007, emerged: 22 Feb. 2007; leg. Y. Sato EUMJ. • 9 ♂; Shizuoka, Shizuoka, Hatanagi; 35.2976°N, 138.21557°E; alt. 828 m; 12 May. 2013; M. Kato leg.; CYI. • 1 ♂; Shizuoka, Shizuoka, Abenoootaki; 35.30031°N, 138.35084°E; alt. 930 m; larva collected: 15 Jan. 2014, emerged: 19 Apr. 2014; M. Kato leg.; CYI. • 8 ♂, 1 ♀; Shizuoka, Ikawa-touge; 35.24094°N, 138.28156°E; alt. 1471 m; 10 May. 2015; M. Kato / Y. Imada leg.; CYI. • 1 ♂; Tokushima, Awa, Mt. Tsurugi; 33.87°N, 134.11°E; 30 May. 1950; Issiki-Ito leg.; USNM. • 1 ♂; Tokushima, Mima, Koyadaira; 33.87543°N, 134.09571°E; alt. 1340 m; 30 Apr. 2016; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. • 1 ♂; Tokushima, Miyoshi, Higashiiya-Sugeoi, near Nagoro Dam; 33.85182°N, 134.0234°E; 29 Apr. 2016; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. • 2 ♂; Tokyo, Mt. Mitake; 35.78°N, 139.14°E; 10 May. 1931; B. Oda leg.; USNM. • 1 sex unknown; Tokyo, Mt. Takao; 35.62°N, 139.24°E; alt. 300-600 m; 7 May. 1922; Esaki leg.; USNM. • 1 ♀; Tokyo, Tokyo, Akiruno, rocky river and stream; 35.74766°N, 139.18466°E; alt. 288 m; 11 May. 2019; L.-P.  Kolcsár leg.; CKLP. • 1 ♂; Tottori, Mt. Daisen; 35.38°N, 133.54°E; 7 Jun. 1930; Hibi leg.; USNM. • 1 ♂; Yamagata, Iide, Mt. Iide; 37.85122°N, 139.78064°E, alt. 600 m; 23 May. 2015; Y. Imada leg.; CYI. • 2 ♂, 1 ♀; Yamagata, Oguni, Nukumidaira; 37.92293°N, 139.67546°E; alt. 433 m; larvae collected: 9 Nov. 2014, emerged: 22 Apr. 2014; Y. Imada leg.; CYI. Russia • Primorsky Krai, Khasansky District, Primorsky Settlement, Zolotistyy [Golden] Stream; 43.10075°N, 131.54862°E; alt. 62 m; 10 Jun. 2007 - 11 Jun. 2007; N.M. Paramonov leg.; CKLP. • 2 ♂; Sakhalin Oblast, Yuzhno-Kurilsk Urban Settlement, Kuril/Kunashir Island, near Lagunnoe Lake; 44.0623°N, 145.759°E; alt. 20 m; 11 Jul. 1954 - 12 Jul. 1954; leg. N.A. Violovich ZIN. • 1 ♂; Sakhalin Oblast, Kunashir Island, Mendeleevo Settlement; 43.971°N, 145.694°E; alt. 220 m; 28 Jun. 1973; I.M. Kerzhner leg.; ZIN. • 1 ♀; Sakhalin Oblast, Kunashir Island, Alekhino Settlement [uninhabited]; 43.91°N, 145.52°E; alt. 5 m, 29 Jun. 1962; G.O. Krivoluckaja leg.; ZIN. • 2 ♂; Sakhalin Oblast, Kunashir Island, the mouth of the Tjatina River; 44.2711°N, 146.1583°E; alt. 15 m; 21 Jul. 2014; Y.N. Sundukov leg.; ZIN. </p>
            <p>Redescription.</p>
            <p> Head. Dark brown to black, with greyish pubescence (Fig. 23B-D). Rostrum short without nasus. Mouth parts pale brown to brown. Palpus brown to dark brown, five segmented; last segment 1.2-1.4  × longer than penultimate (Fig. 23B, D). Scape cylindrical, 1.6-1.8  × longer than pedicel; pedicel ovate; pedicel brown, scape yellow to brown (Figs 4D, 23B, D); flagellum 14-segmented, pale brown to brown, monochrome or gradually darkening from base to tip. Flagellar segments simple, cylindrical in both sexes, not expanded ventrally; all male flagellomeres and 2-8 female flagellomeres covered with sparse whitish setae/sensilla; sensilla slightly denser in ventral side; verticels less prominent, 4-6 verticels not showing clear arrangement (Figs 4D, 23B, D). </p>
            <p> Thorax. General colour shiny dark brown to black, with yellowish area in lateral side. Pronotum dark brown to black. Anterior part of mesonotum brown with black stripes or patches, usually forming three longitudinal, black markings on presutural area of scutum, and two drop-shaped black markings on postsutural area of scutum (Fig. 23C) or one large marking; black parts bare and shiny; paler parts with pubescence and with several long yellow hairs, forming longitudinal lines (Fig. 23C). Dorsal pleural area, base of wing, anepimeron, and base of halter yellowish. Coxa black, ventrally paler (Fig. 23B); trochanter yellow; femur gradually darkening distally, basal part yellowish, apical part dark brown to black; tibia and tarsus dark brown. Wing hyaline; veins brown; pterostigma pale; three branches of M reaching wing margin, M1 at same level as M1+2, cell a2 narrow,&gt; 8  × longer than wide (Fig. 5D); membrane with interference patterns, visible with dark background (Fig. 23A). Halter stem pale brown, knob brown. </p>
            <p>Abdomen. Black, without any distinct patterns (Fig. 23A).</p>
            <p> Male terminalia: Relatively small, uniformly black, directed caudally (Fig. 23A). Tergite 9 fused with gonocoxite and sternite 9 (Fig. 24C); tergite 9 with median lobe, with notch at middle (Fig. 24A); lateral lobes of tergite 9 not prominent. Sternite 9 reduced to narrow band (Fig. 24B, C). Gonocoxite relatively large, 1.2-1.4  × longer than tergite 9, in lateral view (Fig. 24C); without any distinct lobes (Fig. 24B, C); inner side of gonocoxite membranous; small round sclerotised patch on membranous area between gonocoxites present (Fig. 24B), triangular in lateral view (Fig. 24C, F); holding base of aedeagal complex if it moved dorsally. Gonostylus with a strongly sclerotised, claw-like outgrowth; tip of gonostylus finger-like (Fig. 24A, C). Aedeagus complex as long as gonocoxite and sternite 9 together; sperm pump and ejaculatory apodeme, partly covered by parameres (Fig. 24F); interbase simple L-shaped, both in lateral and dorsal/ventral views (Fig. 24D-F); posterior part blade-like, with a small notch on dorsal side, in lateral view (Fig. 24F); aedeagus widened and curved dorsally at right angle in midlength, covered with prominent spines on ventral and lateral sides; membranous area on ventral side behind ventral spines, make flexible the aedeagus and able to straighten, probably during copulation (Fig. 24D, F); aedeagus with apical branches short, directed caudally; median branch slightly longer and wider than lateral ones (Fig. 24D, F). </p>
            <p> Female terminalia: Black, tips of cercus and hypopygial valve yellowish (Fig. 23E). Tergite 8, 2  × larger than tergite 9 in lateral view (Fig. 25B); not divided at middle (Fig. 25A). Caudal margin of tergite 9 straight in lateral view (Fig. 25B). Lateral lobe of tergite 10 finger-like, 3  × longer than wide, well separated from tergite 10 (Fig. 25A); triangular sclerite large, separated from tergite 10 (Fig. 25A). Cercus and hypogynial valve blade-like, relative narrow compared to other cylindrotomines (Fig. 25B); rough surface on dorsal tip of cercus hardly recognisable, only a few small pyramid teeth present. Genital fork large, heavily sclerotised plate; common sperm duct after genital opening relatively short, hardly recognisable; sperm ducts carrot-shaped; wall of sperm wrinkled (Fig. 25C); three round spermathecae present, diameter ~ 1/3-1/2  × width of genital fork (Fig. 25D). </p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p>South Korea, Japan (Honshu I and Shikoku I), and Russia (Jewish Autonomous Oblast, Sakhalin Oblast (Kuril Is: Kunashir I) (Oosterbroek 2021). First records from Japan: Kyushu I (Fig. 22B).</p>
            <p>Comments.</p>
            <p> As with other  Cylindrotominae species that have simple antennae and three M vein branches, this species was also originally described as  Phalacrocera (Alexander 1919). Later Takahashi (1960) moved this species to the  Liogma genus based on the morphological similarity of the immature stages with  Liogma nodicornis (Osten Sacken, 1865). However,  L. mikado is a morphologically and genetically quite distinct species from the other  Liogma species, and the exact phylogenetic position remains unclear. </p>
        </div>
    </body>
</html>
	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/F9511990009B516C993E0AF41571BD3C	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Kolcsar, Levente-Peter;Paramonov, Nikolai;Imada, Yume;Kato, Daichi;Gamboa, Maribet;Shinoka, Dai;Kato, Makoto;Watanabe, Kozo	Kolcsar, Levente-Peter, Paramonov, Nikolai, Imada, Yume, Kato, Daichi, Gamboa, Maribet, Shinoka, Dai, Kato, Makoto, Watanabe, Kozo (2022): Notes on the taxonomic status and distribution of some Cylindrotomidae (Diptera, Tipuloidea), with emphasis on Japanese species. ZooKeys 1083: 13-88, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1083.75624, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1083.75624
A7A38AA5ED615E5FA1E0C9B520E5CD86.text	A7A38AA5ED615E5FA1E0C9B520E5CD86.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Liogma nodicornis (Osten Sacken 1865)	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
    <body>
        <div>
            <p> Liogma nodicornis (Osten Sacken, 1865)</p>
            <p>Figs 26, 27</p>
            <p> Liogma flaveola Alexander, 1919. </p>
            <p>Non-type material examined.</p>
            <p> Canada • 1 ♀; Manitoba, Winnipeg, Birds Hill Park, cedar bog; 50.03°N, 96.91° W; alt. 250 m; 20 Jun. 2003; F. Brodo leg.; CKLP. • 1 ♂, 2 ♀; Ontario, Ottawa, Stony Swamp; 45.3°N, 75.83° W; alt. 115 m; 7 Jun. 2011; • 1 ♂; same locality; 30 May. 2011; F. Brodo leg.; CKLP. Usa • 1 ♂; New Hampshire, Twin mountains, vochtig loofbos; 44.218°N, 71.415° W; alt. 600 m; 20 Jun. 1982; P. Oosterbroek / I. Tangelder leg.; CKLP. • 1 ♂; • 1 ♂; Michigan, Delta Co., 11 Jun. 1860; R. and K. Dreisbach leg; " Green label under the geographical label:  Liogma nodicornis (O.S.). NOTE genotype of  Liogma ". </p>
            <p>Supplementary description.</p>
            <p> Male terminalia directed caudally. Tergite 9 fused with gonocoxite at base (Fig. 26C); caudal margin of tergite 9 with prominent lateral lobe, finger-like in lateral view (Fig. 26C), elongated, triangular in dorsal view (Fig. 26A); posterior margin with additional small, triangular outgrowth (Fig. 26A). Sternite 9 membranous (Fig. 26B). Gonocoxite 1.3-1.5  × longer than tergite 9 (including lobe); ventral lobe relatively small, triangular both lateral and ventral views, covered by few setae (Fig. 26B, C); inner surface of gonocoxite with hairs, proximal corner with hairless, paler area (Fig. 26A). Gonostylus simple, tapering to distal end. Aedeagus complex very large, 1.8-1.9  × longer than gonocoxite, in lateral view (Fig. 26C); ejaculator apodeme large, not covered by paramere in lateral view (Fig. 26F); tip of interbase directed inward in dorsal view (Fig. 26D), and ventrally in lateral view (Fig. 26F); dorsal lobe between interbases small, membranous, hardly noticeable (Fig. 26F); aedeagus long, trifid, median branch slightly shorter (Fig. 26D-F); lateral branch prolonged ventrally/caudally (Fig. 26F); tips of branch flattened; sperm ducts branching from elongated portion of sperm pump, branching area dark (Fig. 26F). </p>
            <p> Female terminalia: Tergite 8, ~ 1.7-1.8  × wider than tergite 9 in lateral view (Fig. 27B), not divided medially (Fig. 27A). Triangular sclerite ~ 1/4 of length of tergite 10; sclerite separated from tip of tergite 10; lateral lobe of tergite 10 medium sized, 2  × as long as wide, with few long hairs (Fig. 27B). Cercus wide, with blunt notches on dorsal, close to tip and ~ 1/3 of mid-length on ventral margin. Hypogynial valve relative long, dorsal margin close to tip concave (Fig. 27B). Common spermathecal duct recognisable; sperm ducts simple, narrow tubes, (Fig. 27C); three round spermathecae with curved, suddenly tapering ducts (Fig. 27D). </p>
            <p>Distribution: Canada and USA from (Alberta to Newfoundland, south to South Dakota, South Carolina and Georgia) (Oosterbroek 2021).</p>
        </div>
    </body>
</html>
	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/A7A38AA5ED615E5FA1E0C9B520E5CD86	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Kolcsar, Levente-Peter;Paramonov, Nikolai;Imada, Yume;Kato, Daichi;Gamboa, Maribet;Shinoka, Dai;Kato, Makoto;Watanabe, Kozo	Kolcsar, Levente-Peter, Paramonov, Nikolai, Imada, Yume, Kato, Daichi, Gamboa, Maribet, Shinoka, Dai, Kato, Makoto, Watanabe, Kozo (2022): Notes on the taxonomic status and distribution of some Cylindrotomidae (Diptera, Tipuloidea), with emphasis on Japanese species. ZooKeys 1083: 13-88, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1083.75624, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1083.75624
1FB4E9F5D07051A7B58528C246A5037F.text	1FB4E9F5D07051A7B58528C246A5037F.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Liogma serraticornis Alexander 1919	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
    <body>
        <div>
            <p> Liogma serraticornis Alexander, 1919</p>
            <p>Figs 4F, 5F, 28, 29, 30, 31A</p>
            <p> Liogma serraticornis in Alexander 1919: 345-346: original description; Alexander 1928: 11: distribution, illustration.; Alexander 1949: 195 comparison.; Esaki 1950: illustration.; Alexander 1953b: 77: faunistic record, distribution.; Ishida 1955: 75-76: distribution.; Takahashi 1960: 84: distribution.; Sidorenko 1999: 68-70: identification key, illustration, distribution.; Nakamura 2001: 23-29: identification key, illustration, distribution, faunistic records.; Paramonov 2004b: 69: faunistic record.; Paramonov 2006: 888-889: identification key, distribution.; Nakamura 2014: 54: distribution.; Kato and Suzuki 2017: 16: distribution.; Imada 2020: biology and ecology of larvae. </p>
            <p> Liogma fuscipennis in Alexander 1932 111-112: original description; Alexander 1953a: 55-56, syn. nov. </p>
            <p>Type material examined.</p>
            <p> Liogma serraticornis Alexander: Paratype: Japan • ♂; Saitama, 29 May. 1919; R. Takahashi leg.; USNM. </p>
            <p>Non-type material examined.</p>
            <p> Japan • 1 ♂; Aichi, Seto, Iwaya-cho, near Iwayada Park; 35.23957°N, 137.15084°E; alt. 300 m; 4 May. 2016; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. • 1 ♂; Aichi, Toei, Futto; 35.10117°N, 137.6607°E; alt. 390 m; larva collected: 9 Mar. 2014, emerged: 1 Apr. 2014; M. Kato leg.; CYI. • 1 ♀; Aichi, Toyota, Kawashimo, triburary of Yahagi River; 35.20376°N, 137.30125°E; alt. 140 m; 4 May. 2014; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. • 1 ♀; Aomori, Hirosaki, Ichinowatari-washinosu; 40.51923°N, 140.43889°E; alt. 205 m; 7 Jun. 2013; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. • 1 ♀; Aomori, Hirosaki, Koguriyama, Inekari River; 40.53658°N, 140.48701°E; alt. 170 m; 7 Jun. 2013; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. • 1 ♀; Ehime, Matsuyama, forest seep and stream; 33.86152°N, 132.82591°E; alt. 180 m; 20 Apr. 2019; L.-P.  Kolcsár leg.; CKLP. • 1 ♂; Ehime, Odamiyama; 33.53°N, 132.86°E; 26 May. 1963; M. Miyatake leg.; EUMJ. • 5 ♂; Ehime, Saijo, spring and mosses rocks; 33.75504°N, 133.15377°E; alt. 1480 m; 16 Jun. 2019; L.-P.  Kolcsár leg.; CKLP. • 1 ♂, 1 ♀; Ehime, Toon-shi, Saragamine; 33.72361°N, 132.88602°E; alt. 955 m; 21 May. 2017; K. Kuroda leg.; EUMJ. • 1 ♂, 1 ♀; Ehime, Wakayama, Mount Ishizuchi; 33.76491°N, 133.12948°E; alt. 1600 m; 5 Jun. 2019; L.-P.  Kolcsár leg.; CKLP. • 2 ♀; Ehime, Wakayama, River Omogo gorge; 33.72581°N, 133.10291°E; alt. 750 m; 5 Jun. 2019; L.-P.  Kolcsár leg.; CKLP.. • 1 ♀; Ehime, Kumakogen, headwaters, stream; 33.56476°N, 132.93501°E; alt. 1387 m; 17 Jun. 2019; L.-P.  Kolcsár leg.; CKLP. • 1 ♀; Fukuoka, Miyako, small stream and Japanese cedar forest; 33.49796°N, 130.95861°E; alt. 686 m; 21 May. 2019; L.-P.  Kolcsár leg.; CKLP. • 1 ♀; Fukuoka, Soeda, rocky streem and moss covered cliff; 33.48309°N, 130.93289°E; alt. 900 m; 21 May. 2019; L.-P.  Kolcsár leg.; CKLP. • 1 ♂; Fukushima, Hinoemata, Ozebunanomori Museum; 36.99082°N, 139.27803°E; alt. 1230 m; 28 Jun. 2015; M. Kato leg.; CYI. • 1 ♂, 1 ♀; Iwate, Hachimantai, Matsuoyoriki; 39.89958°N, 140.89155°E; alt. 1200 m; larvae collected: 14 Jun. 2014, emerged: 4 Jul. 2014; Y. Imada leg.; CYI. • 1 ♂; Kagoshima, Inaodake; 31.12°N, 130.88°E; 11 May. 1952; Ito-Issiki leg.; USNM. • 1 ♀; Kagoshima, Kirishima, around Amori-gawa River, Hayato-cho-Kareigawa; 31.79821°N, 130.75275°E; 80 m; 28 Apr. 2018; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. • 1 ♂; Kumamoto, Gokanosho; 32.53°N, 130.86°E; 5 May. 1926; S. Issiki leg.; USNM. • 1 ♀; Kumamoto, Yatsushiro, Izumimachi-Momiki; 32.4915°N, 130.99084°E; alt. 1060 m; 11 May. 2016; T. Hosoya, S. Kakizoe leg.; BLKU. • 1 ♀; Kumamoto, Yatsushiro, Momiki-gawa river, Izumimachi-Momiki and Hagi; 32.51417°N, 130.93927°E; alt. 530 m; 11 May. 2016; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. • 1 ♂; Kyoto, Kyoto, Kibune; 35.13681°N, 135.76622°E; alt. 458 m; 1 May. 2016; Y. Imada leg.; CYI. • 1 ♂; Nagano, Oshika, Oike; 35.4887°N, 138.0219°E; alt. 1250 m; 19 Oct. 2015; Y. Imada leg.; CYI. • 1 ♂; Nagano, Ueda, Sanada-machi, Irikaruizawa; 36.47441°N, 138.25481°E; alt. 777 m; 16 May. 2012; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. • 1 ♂; Nagasaki, Unzen; 32.8°N, 130.23°E; May 1926; E. Svenson leg.; USNM. • 1 ♂; Oita, Kokonoe, Tano; 33.11621°N, 131.23541°E; alt. 1150 m; 7 May. 2016; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. • 2 ♂; Saga, Kanzaki, springs; 33.43401°N, 130.36866°E; alt. 980 m; 23 May. 2019; L.-P.  Kolcsár leg.; CKLP. • 1 ♂; Saga, Karatsu, Tsubakiyama Pond, Hamatama-machi-torisu; 33.40414°N, 130.1064°E; alt. 630 m; 26. Apr. 2015; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. • 1 ♂, 1 ♀; Saga, Saga, Kase river near Hokuzan Dam, Fujimachi-sekiya; 33.43322°N, 130.23212°E; alt. 325 m; 23 Apr. 2015; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. • 1 ♂; Tokushima, Miyoshi, around Matsuogawa Dam, Higashiiya-Ochiai; 33.96478°N, 133.93908°E; alt. 900 m; 15 May. 2015; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. • 2 ♂; Tokushima, Minokosi, Mt. Tsurugi; 33.87°N, 134.11°E; alt. 1400 m; 1 Jun. 1950; Issiki-Ito leg.; EUMJ. • 1 ♂; Wakayama, Kozagawa, Takinohai; 33.6058°N, 135.76127°E; alt. 80 m; 13 Apr. 2014; M. Kato leg.; CYI. • 1 ♀; Yamanashi, Koshu, Enzankamihagihara, Kaminichikawa Pass; 35.73161°N, 138.83208°E; alt. 1580 m; 8 Jul. 2014; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. Russia • 1 ♂; Khabarovsk Krai, Khabarovsk City; 48.48022°N, 135.07191°E; alt. 80 m; 2 Jun. 2014 - 6 Jun. 2014; N.E. Vikhrev leg.; ZIN. • 1 ♂, 1 ♀; Primorsky Krai, Khasansky District, Primorsky Settlement, Zolotistyy [Golden] Stream; 43.10075°N, 131.54862°E; alt. 62 m; 13 Jun. 2007; N.M. Paramonov leg.; CKLP. • 1 ♂; Primorsky Krai, Kedrovaya Pad Nature Reserve; 43.10075°N, 131.54862°E; alt. 62 m; 7 Jul. 1940; A.S. Monchadskij leg. • 1 ♂; same locality; 12 Jun. 1962; E.P. Narchuk leg.; • 1 ♂; same locality; 2 Jul. 1962; E.P. Narchuk leg.; ZIN. • 1 ♂; Primorsky Krai, Kedrovaya Pad Nature Reserve, bog near Kedrovka River; 43.10075°N, 131.54862° E; alt. 62 m; 16 Jun. 2007; • 1 ♂; same locality; 1 Jun. 2007 - 11 Jun. 2007; N.M. Paramonov leg.; ZIN. • Primorsky Krai, Kedrovaya Pad Nature Reserve, Zolotistyy [Golden] Stream; 43.1007°N, 131.5486°E; alt. 62 m; 2007.06.13, 1 ♂, N.M. Paramonov leg.; ZIN. • 1 ♂; Primorsky Krai, Terney District, Terney Urban-type Settlement, Lower Serebryanka [Sanhobe] River Valley; 45.09314°N, 136.5852°E; alt. 60 m; 18 Jun. 1937; K.J. Grunin leg.; ZIN. • 5 ♂; Sakhalin Oblast, Yuzhno-Kurilsk Urban Settlement, Kuril Islands, Kunashir Island, near Lagunnoe Lake; 44.062°N, 145.759°E; alt. 20 m; 11 Jul. 1954; N.A. Violovich leg.; ZIN. • 2 ♂; Sakhalin Oblast, Kunashir Island, lower course of the Saratovskaja River; 44.26042°N, 146.09912°E; alt. 16 m; 3 Jul. 2014 - 6 Jul. 2014; Y.N. Sundukov leg.; ZIN. • 1 ♂; Sakhalin Oblast, Kunashir Island, lower course of the Filatova River; 44.19078°N, 146.02006°E; alt. 60 m; 27 Jun. 2013 - 28 Jun. 2013; Y.N. Sundukov leg.; ZIN. • 1 ♂; Sakhalin Oblast, Kunashir Island, Alekhino Settlement [uninhabited]; 43.918°N, 145.529°E; alt. 5 m; 29 Jun. 1962; G.O. Krivoluckaja leg.; ZIN. • 1 ♀; Sakhalin Oblast, Sakhalin Island, Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk City; 46.959°N, 142.738°E; alt. 50 m; 22 Jun. 1956; • 1 ♂, 1 ♀; same locality; 27 Jun. 1956; N.A. Violovich leg.; ZIN. </p>
            <p>Redescription.</p>
            <p> Head. Black with weak greyish pubescence (Fig. 28C, D). Rostrum short without nasus, but with few hairs (Fig. 28B, E); rostrum and mouthparts brown to black (Fig. 28B, E). Palpus brown to black, five-segmented; first two segments sometimes darker than the rest; last segment 1.3-1.8  × longer than penultimate. Scape cylindrical 1.5-2  × longer than pedicel (Fig. 4F); pedicel ovate; pedicel and scape same coloured or scape slightly darker, yellowish brown to brown; flagellum 14 segmented, monochrome dark brown to black; flagellar segments greatly expanded ventrally in male, last flagellomere cylindrical (Figs 4F, 28D). Flagellomeres 2-6 or 7 extended in female, remaining segments cylindrical (Figs 4F, 28E). Extended flagellomeres covered with dense whitish sensilla; 2-4 long verticels on dorsal surface, two verticels in lateral surface, two shorter on ventral side; first flagellomere always bearing additional verticels (Fig. 4F). </p>
            <p> Thorax. Uniformly black with very weak greyish pubescence (Fig. 28B, C). Pleural area, base of wing, and base of halter yellowish or greyish white (Fig. 28B). Scatter, pale, short hairs present on mesonotum, forming two barely visible lines. Ventral part of thorax generally dark brown to uniformly black. Anterior half or more of mediotergite and almost all pleurotergite rugose (Fig. 28B). Trochanter yellow to pale brown; femur gradually darkening, basal part yellowish, apically dark brown; tibia gradually darkening distally, pale brown to dark brownish black; tarsus uniformly black (Fig. 28A). Wing hyaline, tinged with yellowish brown (typical "  Liogma serraticornis " form) or infuscated ("  Liogma fuscipennis " form); pterostigma pale brown to black; veins dark brown; three branches of M reaching wing margin; M1 at same level as M1+2, cell a2 less than 6  × longer than wide (Fig. 5F); membrane with interference patterns, visible with dark background (Fig. 28A). Halter monochrome, yellowish brown to black (Fig. 28A). </p>
            <p>Abdomen. Black, without any clear patterns (Fig. 28A).</p>
            <p> Male terminalia: Relatively small, uniformly black or ventral parts of gonocoxite paler; directed caudally (Fig. 28A). Tergite 9 fused with gonocoxite (Fig. 29C); proximal margin with two obtuse triangular lobes, which bent back under tergite 9 (Fig. 29A). Sternite 9 fully membranous (Fig. 29B). Gonocoxite large, 1.7-1.8  × longer than tergite 9; with long ventral lobe, tip covered by pale, short spine-like setae (Fig. 29B, C); inner surface of gonocoxite sclerotised, forming dorsal plate with conspicuous edge next to tergite 9 (Fig. 29A). Gonostylus simple, tapering to tip (Fig. 29A-C). Aedeagus complex large, 1.2-1.3  × longer than gonocoxite. Ejaculator apodeme and sperm pump large, together half of length of aedeagal complex (Fig. 29D-F); not covered by parameres (Fig. 29F); interbase spoon-like with small notch apically in lateral view (Fig. 29F); dorsal lobe of interbase small, directed inward in dorsal view (Fig. 29D); dorsal lobe between interbases large, globular and semi-transparent, as wide as tip of interbase in lateral view (Fig. 29F). Aedeagus straight, directed ventrally in 45°; sperm ducts branching from elongated portion of sperm pump, base of branches darkened (Fig. 29D, F); middle branch of aedeagus shorter than lateral branches; each with small spines ventrally; apical end of branches with hyaline membranous tissue (Fig. 29G). </p>
            <p> Female terminalia: Brown to black, end of cercus and hypogynial valve yellowish (Fig. 28F). Tergite 8&gt; 2  × wider than tergite 9 in lateral view (Fig. 30B); not divided medially in dorsal view (Fig. 30A). Tergite 9 widening ventrally in lateral view, with small notch at posterior corner (Fig. 30B). Tergite 10 with triangular sclerite smaller, ~ 1/3 of length of tergite 10; sclerite separated from tergite 10 (Fig. 30B); lateral lobe relatively long, at least 2  × longer than wide (Fig. 30B). Cercus oval; hypogynial valve elongated, blade-shaped. Cercus on dorsal surface close to apical end weakly, but clearly rugose, serrate (Fig. 30B); ventral margin of cercus without notch, evenly curved (Fig. 30B). Common spermathecal duct, short, indistinct; spermathecal ducts with extended parts, golf-tees-like (Fig. 30C); three round, spermathecae present, duct curved or straight (Fig. 30D). </p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p>Japan (Hokkaido I, Honshu I, Shikoku I, and Kyushu I) and Russia (Primorsky Krai, Sakhalin Oblast (incl. Kuril I) (Oosterbroek 2021). First record from Khabarovsk Krai, Russia (Fig. 31A).</p>
            <p>Comments.</p>
            <p> The morphological comparison of this species with  L. brevipecten is discussed under that species. Colouration is variable within specimens of  Liogma serraticornis . Usually, colouration is black with a paler pleural area, and the wing membrane is almost transparent, tinged with pale yellowish brown. In darker specimens, the pleural area and wing membrane is infuscated. This darker form was described as a separate species,  Liogma fuscipennis Alexander, 1932, but was later synonymised with  L. serraticornis (Alexander 1953). No genital and genetic difference between the paler and darker specimens were found during our study. </p>
        </div>
    </body>
</html>
	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/1FB4E9F5D07051A7B58528C246A5037F	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Kolcsar, Levente-Peter;Paramonov, Nikolai;Imada, Yume;Kato, Daichi;Gamboa, Maribet;Shinoka, Dai;Kato, Makoto;Watanabe, Kozo	Kolcsar, Levente-Peter, Paramonov, Nikolai, Imada, Yume, Kato, Daichi, Gamboa, Maribet, Shinoka, Dai, Kato, Makoto, Watanabe, Kozo (2022): Notes on the taxonomic status and distribution of some Cylindrotomidae (Diptera, Tipuloidea), with emphasis on Japanese species. ZooKeys 1083: 13-88, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1083.75624, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1083.75624
E32EFAB8B7EF53DCB9E9327B748DAA80.text	E32EFAB8B7EF53DCB9E9327B748DAA80.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Phalacrocera replicata (Linnaeus 1758)	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
    <body>
        <div>
            <p> Phalacrocera replicata (Linnaeus, 1758)</p>
            <p>Figs 32, 33</p>
            <p> Phalacrocera nudicornis (Schummel, 1829) </p>
            <p> Phalacrocera brevirostris (Zetterstedt, 1838) </p>
            <p> Phalacrocera diversa (Walker, 1856) </p>
            <p> Phalacrocera neoxena Alexander, 1914. </p>
            <p>Non-type material examined.</p>
            <p>Canada • 2 ♂, 1 ♀; Ontario, Ottawa, Stony Swamp; 45.3°N, 75.83° W; alt. 115 m; 10 May. 2017; F. Brodo leg.; CKLP. Finland • 2 ♂, 1 ♀; Kirkkonummi, Stormossen. 60.07901°N, 24.57980°E; alt. 7 m; 2 Jun. 2016; E. Viitanen leg.; CKLP. • 1 ♂, 2 ♀; Kaarina, Jarvela; 60.46157°N, 22.37418°E; alt. 38 m; 18 May. 2016 - 1 Jun. 2016; E. Viitanen leg.; Malaise trap; CKLP. • 1 ♂; Tervola, Karhakkamaanjanka; 66.19764°N, 25.12660°E; alt. 58 m; 25 May. 2004 - 28 Jun. 2004; J. Salmela leg.; CKLP. Russia • 1 ♂; Krasnoyarsk Krai, Turukhansky District, Igarka City, within the settlement, swampy lake shore in the city; 67.466°N, 86.581°E; alt. 23 m; 30 Jun. 1967; K.B. Gorodkov leg.; CKLP. • 1 ♀; Krasnoyarsk Krai, Igarka City, within the settlement, sedge swamp; 67.466°N, 86.581°E; alt. 23 m; 1 Jul. 1967; K.B. Gorodkov leg.; CKLP. Usa • 2 ♂; Michigan, Cheboygan, hard wood swamp; 45.29277°N, 84.42805° W, alt. 280 m; 20 May. 2015; F. Brodo leg.; CKLP.</p>
            <p>Supplementary description.</p>
            <p> Male terminalia directed dorsally. Tergite 9 fused with gonocoxite and sternite 9 (Fig. 32C); caudal margin of tergite 9 with small, rounded lateral lobe both ventral and lateral view (Fig. 32A, C); posterior margin U- or V-shaped. Sternite 9 reduced to narrow band (Fig. 32B, C). Gonocoxite 1.2-1.3  × longer than tergite 9; ventral lobe relatively small, rounded (in dry specimen looks more finger-like) (Fig. 32B); apical lobe indistinct; inner surface of gonocoxite sclerotised, with few hairs, without evident modifications. Gonostylus comparable large and complex, with a subapical tooth on outer margin; additional two or three smaller teeth basally (Fig. 32A, C). Aedeagus complex 1.2-1.3  × longer than gonocoxite in lateral view (Fig. 32C); ejaculator apodeme large, not covered by paramere in lateral view (Fig. 32F); interbase seems flat and wide, with a small dorsal tooth in lateral view (Fig. 32F); interbase directed dorso-laterally, with a deep notch on tip in dorsal view (Fig. 32D, E); dorsal lobe between interbases indistinct or absent (Fig. 32D); aedeagus half as long as entry aedeagus complex; aedeagus trifid, straight; median branch longer than lateral branches (Fig. 32D-F), with a triangular dorsal outgrowth; tip slightly bifid or trifid, depend on angle (Fig. 32A); lateral branches slightly curved laterally in dorsal and ventral view (Fig. 32D, E); tips of branch widened dorsally; sperm ducts branching from short elongation of sperm pump; branching area dark (Fig. 32D-F). </p>
            <p>Female terminalia: Tergite 8 posterior part membranous, with few hairs, but not divided medially (Fig. 33A); wider than tergite 9 in lateral view (Fig. 33B). Tergite 10 with small, slightly separated median lobe in middle of posterior margin (Fig. 33A, B); covered with short hairs. Triangular sclerite widely fused with tip of tergite 10; tergite 10 without lateral lobe (Fig. 33B). Cercus elongated blade, with dorsal margin with weakly serrate margin (Fig. 33B). Hypogynial valve wide and long, dorsal margin close to tip with tooth-like lobe, directed caudally (Fig. 33B, C). Common spermathecal duct short or indistinct; sperm ducts simple, without distinct pattern, tapering proximally (Fig. 33D); three spermathecae elongated, with straight duct (Fig. 33E).</p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p>Widely distributed in Holarctic. It has been reported from the Nearctic: Canada and USA from Ontario and Quebec, south to Michigan, Pennsylvania and Massachusetts. Palearctic: Austria, Belarus, Belgium, China (Heilongjiang), Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Great Britain, Ireland, Italy (north), Lithuania, Mongolia, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Russia: North European Russia, Central European Russia, East Siberia (Irkutsk Oblast), Far East (Republic of Sakha (Yakutia), Spain (Zamoro), Sweden, Switzerland, Ukraine (Oosterbroek 2021, Paramonov and Pilipenko 2021).. Here we record the species for the first time from Krasnoyarsk Krai, East Siberia, Russia.</p>
        </div>
    </body>
</html>
	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E32EFAB8B7EF53DCB9E9327B748DAA80	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Kolcsar, Levente-Peter;Paramonov, Nikolai;Imada, Yume;Kato, Daichi;Gamboa, Maribet;Shinoka, Dai;Kato, Makoto;Watanabe, Kozo	Kolcsar, Levente-Peter, Paramonov, Nikolai, Imada, Yume, Kato, Daichi, Gamboa, Maribet, Shinoka, Dai, Kato, Makoto, Watanabe, Kozo (2022): Notes on the taxonomic status and distribution of some Cylindrotomidae (Diptera, Tipuloidea), with emphasis on Japanese species. ZooKeys 1083: 13-88, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1083.75624, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1083.75624
6BEB9DF891D25EA591312A993D5110EA.text	6BEB9DF891D25EA591312A993D5110EA.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Phalacrocera tipulina Osten Sacken 1865	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
    <body>
        <div>
            <p> Phalacrocera tipulina Osten Sacken, 1865</p>
            <p>Figs 34, 35</p>
            <p>Non-type material examined.</p>
            <p>Canada • 1 ♂; Quebec, Schefferville, Lac Le Jeune; 54.83006°N, 66.82436° W; alt. 500 m; 13 Jul 1981; F. Brodo leg.; CKLP. • 1 ♂; Quebec, Schefferville, Ashtray lake, 26 km SE from Schefferville; 54.66656°N, 66.65095° W; alt. 500 m; 15 Jul. 1981; F. Brodo leg.; CKLP. • 1 ♂; Quebec, Schefferville, Iron Arm, 18 km SE from Schefferville; 54.70211°N, 66.7630° W; alt. 530 m; 18 Jul. 1981; F. Brodo leg.; CKLP. Usa • 3 ♂, 2 ♀; Maine, Jonesport, Rogue Island, Bonney Point fen near coast; 44.57845°N, 67.52928° W; alt. 20 m; 2 Jun. 2011; F. Brodo leg.; CKLP. • 1 ♂, 1 ♀; Virginia, Pearisburg, Mountain Lake; 37.36106°N, 80.53231° W; alt. 1190 m; 25 Feb. 2018; Y. Imada leg.; CKLP.</p>
            <p>Supplementary description.</p>
            <p> Male terminalia directed dorsally. Tergite 9 fused with gonocoxite and sternite 9 (Fig. 34C); caudal margin of tergite 9 medially with small, darker, outgrowths and with deep U-shaped notch between them (Fig. 34A); tip of median lobes rounded in dorsal view (Fig. 34A), triangular in in lateral view (Fig. 34C); tergite 9 without lateral lobes. Sternite 9 reduced to narrow band (Fig. 34B). Gonocoxite 1.2-1.3  × longer than tergite 9; ventral lobe very small membranous and indistinct (Fig. 34B, C); apical lobe indistinct; inner surface of gonocoxite sclerotised, with few hairs, forming a triangular sclerite. Gonostylus simple, tapering distally (Fig. 34A-C). Aedeagus complex 1.1-1.2  × longer than gonocoxite in lateral view (Fig. 34C); ejaculator apodeme medium sized, not covered by paramere in lateral view (Fig. 34F); interbase seems flat and wide, both dorsal and lateral view (Fig. 34D, F); interbase with small tooth apically, directed inward in dorsal view; caudal margin with additional notches, which seems teeth in lateral view; median lobe between interbases absent or indistinct; parameres fused ventrally, and forming wide plate, as wide as interbases together (Fig. 34D, E); aedeagus trifid, lateral branches straight, shorten than median tube (Fig. 34D-F); median branch longer than lateral branches, situated dorsally to lateral branches, with a bifid (visible dorsally or caudally), prominent outgrowth; directed dorsally, slightly backward (Fig. 34F); tips of branch tapering distally; sperm ducts branching from wide elongation of sperm pump; branching area slightly dark (Fig. 34D-F). </p>
            <p>Female terminalia: Tergite 8 posterior part membranous, with few hairs, but not divided medially (Fig. 35A); wider than tergite 9 in lateral view (Fig. 35B). Tergite 9 directed caudally, lateral corner triangular. Triangular sclerite large, fused with tergite 10 uncertain; tergite 10 with small, less separated lateral lobe (Fig. 35B). Cercus short, widening apically, with blunt tip; dorsal margin with rugged margin, formed by small outgrowths (Fig. 35A, B). Sternite 8 and hypogynial valve wide and long, dorsal margin close to tip with tooth-like lobe, directed caudally (Fig. 35B, C). Common spermathecal duct present; sperm ducts simple, with distinct darkened area after branching, evenly tapering proximally (Fig. 35C); three spermathecae rounded, with very long and irregularly curved duct (Fig. 35D).</p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p>Canada, USA (Wisconsin to Ontario and Newfoundland, south to Virginia) (Oosterbroek 2021).</p>
        </div>
    </body>
</html>
	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/6BEB9DF891D25EA591312A993D5110EA	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Kolcsar, Levente-Peter;Paramonov, Nikolai;Imada, Yume;Kato, Daichi;Gamboa, Maribet;Shinoka, Dai;Kato, Makoto;Watanabe, Kozo	Kolcsar, Levente-Peter, Paramonov, Nikolai, Imada, Yume, Kato, Daichi, Gamboa, Maribet, Shinoka, Dai, Kato, Makoto, Watanabe, Kozo (2022): Notes on the taxonomic status and distribution of some Cylindrotomidae (Diptera, Tipuloidea), with emphasis on Japanese species. ZooKeys 1083: 13-88, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1083.75624, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1083.75624
7BB10EA10CEB5BFB8EB0B5B6B534A4A0.text	7BB10EA10CEB5BFB8EB0B5B6B534A4A0.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Triogma kuwanai (Alexander 1913)	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
    <body>
        <div>
            <p> Triogma kuwanai (Alexander, 1913)</p>
            <p>Figs 4G, 5G, H, 31B, 36, 37, 38</p>
            <p> Triogma kuwanai limbinervis Alexander, 1953, syn. nov. </p>
            <p> Triogma nimbipennis Alexander, 1941, syn. nov. </p>
            <p> Liogma kuwanai in Alexander 1913: 294-295, 321-322: illustration, original description; Alexander 1920: 15-16: female description. </p>
            <p> Triogma kuwanai in Alexander 1928: 12: distribution, illustrations, comb. nov.; Esaki 1950: illustration; Alexander 1953a: 56: faunistic records; in Takahashi 1960: 81: distribution; Nakamura 2001: 23-29: identification key, illustration, distribution, faunistic records; Nakamura 2005: 685: illustration; Oosterbroek 2020 (since 2018): taxonomic status. Imada 2020: biology and ecology of larvae. </p>
            <p> Triogma kuwanai kuwanai in Ishida 1955: 76-77: distribution; Sidorenko 1999: 68-70: identification key, illustration, distribution; Paramonov 2006: 888-889: identification key, illustration, distribution; Nakamura 2014: 54: distribution; Kato and Suzuki 2017: 16: faunistic records, distribution. </p>
            <p> Triogma kuwanai limbinervis ssp. n. in Alexander 1953a: 56-57: original description, illustration; Alexander, 1953b: 77: distribution; Takahashi 1960: 82: distribution; Sidorenko 1999: 68-70: identification key, illustration, distribution; Paramonov 2006: 888-889: identification key, distribution; Nakamura 2014: 54: distribution. </p>
            <p> Triogma limbinervis in Oosterbroek 2020 (since 2018): taxonomic status. </p>
            <p> Triogma nimbipennis in Alexander 1941: 407-408: original description, illustration, comparison; Yang 1991: information about type material; Sinclair and Dorchin 2010: 80: information about type material; Alexander and Alexander 1973: 69: catalogue, distribution; Oosterbroek 2020: taxonomic status. </p>
            <p>Type material examined.</p>
            <p> Triogma kuwanai limbinervis Alexander, 1953: Paratype: Japan • ♀; Kochi, Tosa, Nisikawa, Mt. Yanase; alt. 800 m; 4 May. 1951; R. Takahashi leg.; USNM. </p>
            <p> Triogma nimbipennis Alexander, 1941: Paratypes: China • ♂; Kuatun (Guadun), Fukien (Fukijen); 2500-3000 m; 23 Apr. 1938; • 2 ♀; same locality; 27 Apr. 1938 - 28 Apr. 1938; • 1 ♀; same locality; 27 Apr. 1938; Klapperich leg.; ZFMK. </p>
            <p>Non-type material examined.</p>
            <p> Triogma kuwanai kuwanai (Alexander, 1913): Japan • 1 ♂; Aomori, Hirosaki, Koguriyama, Inekari River; 40.53658°N, 140.48701°E; alt. 170 m; 24 May. 2013; • 1 ♂; same locality; 25 May. 2013; • 1 ♀; same locality; 28 May. 2013; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. • 2 ♂; Aomori, Nakadomari, Osawanai, Osawanai Pond; 40.94641°N, 140.46231°E; alt. 35 m; 15 May. 2014; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. • 1 ♂; Aomori, Nishimeyamura, Hirasawa River; 40.48729°N, 140.31335°E; alt. 710 m; 4 Jun. 2013; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. • 1 ♂; Aomori, Towada, Okuse, Tsutanuma Path; 40.59084°N, 140.95705°E; alt. 468 m; 23 May. 2014; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. • 1 ♂; Ehime, Iyo, Mt. Saragamine; 33.72°N, 132.89°E, 8 May. 1949; M. Miyatake leg.; EUMJ. • 1 ♀; Ehime, Komi, Yanadani; 33.55°N, 133.01°E; 6 May. 1994 - 8 May. 1994; Ohbayashi, Nishino, Okada le.; EUMJ. • 1 ♀; Ehime, Matsuyama, Misaka-toge; 33.71°N, 132.85°E; 3 May. 1951; Yano T. leg.; EUMJ. • 1, sex unknown; Ehime, Matsuyama, Sugitate; 33.84°N, 132.79°E; 8 Ap. 1950; M. Miyatake leg.; EUMJ. • 1 ♀; Ehime,?Matsuyama, Shichidori; 33.84°N, 132.79°E; 3 May. 1952; Ide leg.; EUMJ. • 1 ♂; Ehime, Saijo, spring and mosses rocks; 33.75504°N, 133.15377°E; alt. 1480 m; 5 Jun. 2019; L.-P.  Kolcsár leg.; CKLP. • 1 ♂; Fukuoka, Fukuoka, Sawara-ku, Itaya, Mt. Sefuri; 33.43811°N, 130.36673°E; alt. 970 m; 2 May. 2015; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. • 1 ♂; Ishikawa, Hakusan, near to Hakusan National Park; 36.25869°N, 136.72558°E; 678 m; 27 May. 2015; M. Kato leg.; CYI. • 1 ♂, 1 ♀; Nagano, Ueda, Sanada-machi, Irikaruizawa; 36.47441°N, 138.25481°E; alt. 777 m; 16 May. 2012; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. • 1 ♂; Oita, Kokonoe, Tano; 33.11621°N, 131.23541°E; alt. 1150 m; 7 May. 2016; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. • 1 ♂; Okayama, Maniwa, Hiruzen-Kamifukuda, Nawashirodani-gawa River; 34.08837°N, 133.87994°E; alt. 600 m; 30 Apr. 2016; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. • 2 ♂, 1 ♀; Saga, Karatsu, Kyuragi-Hirano, Mt. Sakurei; 33.35701°N, 130.07038°E; alt. 862 m; 26 Apr. 2015; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. • 1 ♀; Saitama, Saitama; 35.88°N, 139.26°E; 29 May. 1919; R. Takahashi leg.; USNM. • 2 ♂, 1 ♀; Shizuoka, Shizuoka, Ikawa-touge; 35.24094°N, 138.28156°E; alt. 1471 m; 10 May. 2015; M. Kato leg.; •1 ♂; same locality; 18 May. 2016; Y. Imada leg.; CYI. • 1 ♂; Tokushima, Awa, Mt. Tsurugi; 33.87°N, 134.11°E; 31 May. 1950; Issiki-Ito leg.; USNM. • 2 ♂; Tokushima, Higashimiyoshi, Higashiyama, Ogawadani River; 34.08837°N, 133.87994°E; alt. 340 m; 21 Apr. 2014; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. • 1 ♂; Tokushima, Miyoshi, Higashiiya-Ochiai, around Matsuogawa Dam; 33.96478°N, 133.93908°E; alt. 900 m; 30 Apr. 2016; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. • 1, sex unknown; Tokyo, Meguro; 35.62°N, 139.7°E; 8 Apr. 1919; R. Takahashi leg.; USNM. • 1 ♂; Tokyo, Mt. Mitake; 35.78°N, 139.14°E; 10 May. 1931; B. Oda leg.; USNM. • 1, sex unknown; Tokyo, Tokyo; 35.67°N, 139.69°E; 8 Apr. 1930; R. Takahashi leg.; USNM. • 1 ♂; Tottori, Kurayoshi, Sekigane-cho-Nozoe, Mt. Karasuga; 35.35352°N, 133.58577°E; alt. 1000 m; 17 May. 2015; D. Kato leg.; BLKU. </p>
            <p> Triogma kuwanai limbinervis Alexander: Japan • 7 ♂ 1 ♀; Ehime, Matsuyama, small ruderal streem; 33.86328°N, 132.77157°E; alt. 125 m; 31 Mar. 2019; L.-P.  Kolcsár leg.; CKLP. • 2 ♀; Ehime, Matsuyama, ruderal forest and orange plantation; 33.86041°N, 132.76552°E; alt. 84 m; 6 Apr. 2019; L.-P.  Kolcsár leg.; CKLP. </p>
            <p>Redescription.</p>
            <p> Head. Rugose; ground colouration dark brown to black, with very intense greyish pubescence (Fig. 36B, C). Rostrum moderately long, with few short hairs; palpus greyish black, five segmented; last segment 1.4-1.6  × longer than penultimate in male, 1.2-1.3  × in female. Scape cylindrical, rugose, ~ 2  × as long as pedicel; pedicel ovate; flagellum 14 segmented monochrome greyish black (Figs 4G, 36B, D). Male flagellomeres, except ultimate, expanded ventrally, covered with dense whitish grey sensilla, denser ventrally; ultimate flagellomere cylindrical, with several sensilla (Figs 4G, 36B); female flagellomeres 1-5 or 6 extended ventrally, remaining flagellomeres fusiform to cylindrical; flagellomeres 1-10 or 11 bearing sparse whitish grey sensilla mostly on ventral side (Figs 4G, 36E). Flagellomere with two long verticels on dorsal surface, two short on lateral face, and two short on ventral side; first flagellomere always bearing additional 1-4 verticels. </p>
            <p> Thorax. Ground colouration dark brown to black, with very dense and intensive grey pruinosity, thorax appearing grey (Fig. 36A-C). Pleural area, wing base, and halter yellow to yellowish brown (Fig. 36B). Anterior part of mesonotum with rugose sutures (Fig. 36C); lateral margin of scutum rugose (Fig. 36A, B). Anterior half of mediotergite rugose (Fig. 36B). Katepisternum and metakatepisternum weakly rugose (Fig. 36B). Trochanter yellow to pale brown; femur gradually darkening apically, basally yellowish, apically black; tibia and tarsus uniformly black (Fig. 36A). Wing hyaline, tinged with pale brown; membrane with interference patterns, visible with dark background (Fig. 36A); pterostigma brown; veins yellow at base of wing, apically brownish; three branches of M reaching wing margin; M1 at same level as M1+2, cell a2 less than 6  × longer than wide (Fig. 5G, H); small, weakly infuscate areas around base and fork of Rs, at crossvein r-m (if present), at base of M1+2, at crossvein m-cu, M2, and crossvein m-m. Note: the early spring specimens from Shikoku Island have more intensive wing pattern (Fig. 5H), than the later spring specimens, or specimens collected in the other part of Japan (Fig. 5G). The pattern is more intensive in the living specimens, less prominent in the dead ones, and became paler after time. </p>
            <p>Abdomen. Grey with reddish tinge, caudal half of tergites and sternites 8 and 9 darker. Abdominal plaques (external remnants of attachment sites of muscles in the pupa) shiny, punctuated (Fig. 36A).</p>
            <p> Male terminalia: Reddish grey, directed caudally (Fig. 36A). Tergite 9 fused with gonocoxite at base, fusion suture present (Fig. 37C); tergite 9 with laterally directed, ear-like lobes in dorsal view (Fig. 37A), triangular or bird-head-shaped laterally (Fig. 37C); additional two very small, triangular lobe on posterior margin of tergite 9. Sternite 9 fully membranous (Fig. 37B). Gonocoxite large 1.5-1.6  × longer than tergite 9, without evident ventral lobe (Fig. 37B, C), small protuberance on ventral margin of gonocoxite in some specimen rarely present (Fig. 37C see arrow). Gonostylus simple, generally tapering to distal end (Fig. 37A, C). Aedeagus complex very large, 1.5-1.7  × longer than gonocoxite (Fig. 37D-F); ejaculatory apodeme and sperm pump large, not covered by paramere in lateral view (Fig. 37D-F); interbase simple, tip rounded or sharp, with small lobe dorsally in lateral view (Fig. 37F); dorsal lobe between interbases, membranous, bubble-like; sperm ducts branching from elongation of sperm pump, area darkened (Fig. 37F); aedeagus 2  × as wide as interbase in lateral view; directed ventrally then turned dorsally, almost turning back anteriorly (Fig. 37F); trifid, medial branch shorter than lateral branches (Fig. 37D-E); tips of branches widened and flattened (Fig. 37D-F). </p>
            <p> Female terminalia: Cercus and hypopygial valve pale brown (Fig. 36E). Tergite 8, ~ 1.5  × larger than tergite 9 in lateral view (Fig. 38B); very broad in dorsal view, not divided medially (Fig. 38A). Tergite 9 triangular in lateral view, with a small round lobe at middle, with few longer setae (Fig. 38A). Triangular sclerites of tergite 10 variable in size (Fig. 38A), in some specimens partly fused with tergite 10. Cercus simple, tip rounded or weakly pointed; dorsal margin weakly rugged, formed by small pyramidal teeth (Fig. 38A, B). Hypogynial valve long, blade-like, longer than cercus; with pit at base, holding lateral lobes of male tergite 9 during copulation (Fig. 38B). Common spermathecal duct short; spermathecal ducts wide, carrot-shaped, suddenly narrow; inner wall rugged (Fig. 38C); three round spermathecae, with very narrow duct (Fig. 38D). </p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p> Japan (Fig. 31B) (Hokkaido I, Honshu I, Shikoku I, and Kyushu I) (Oosterbroek 2021). Distribution records of  Triogma kuwanai limbinervis (Shikoku I) and  T. nimbipennis transferred to  Triogma kuwanai (China: Zhejiang and Fujian). </p>
            <p>Comments.</p>
            <p> Alexander (1953a) described the subspecies,  Triogma kuwanai limbinervis , from Shikoku Island, of which wing markings in some individuals are more conspicuous than those of  T. k. kuwanai . In the original description, Alexander noted, "there is evidence of mergence with the typical form -  Triogma kuwanai kuwanai -, where the wings are unpatterned or virtually so" (Alexander 1953a).  Triogma k. limbinervis has been referred to as the  T. limbinervis in the CCW (since 2018) due to its sympatric occurrence with  Triogma kuwanai in Shikoku Island. This study suggests that wing markings, the diagnostic character of  T. k. limbinervis (Fig. 5H), appear only in early spring specimens from Shikoku and Kyushu Islands, but do not after early spring in later specimens. It is also observed that wing marking turns paler over time. Some specimens from northern Honshu occasionally have pale wing markings, as well, suggesting variation. These two subspecies do not significantly differ in terms of male and female terminalia, and were not distinguished as different by the barcode sequences.  Triogma k. limbinervis syn. nov. is therefore synonymised with  Triogma kuwanai . Another closely related species  T. nimbipennis Alexander, 1941, was described from China (Zhejiang and Fujian) (Alexander 1941). This species is quite similar to  T. kuwanai , and shows a subtle difference in the colour tint: particularly, the wings of  T. nimbipennis are darker than those of  T. kuwanai . Alexander (1941) mentioned that  T. nimbipennis can be considered as a subspecies of  T. kuwanai . After the morphological comparison of the type specimens of  T. nimbipennis with  T. kuwanai , the two species were found not to differ in genital structure, and so  T. nimbipennis syn. nov. is proposed as a junior synonym of  Triogma kuwanai . </p>
        </div>
    </body>
</html>
	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/7BB10EA10CEB5BFB8EB0B5B6B534A4A0	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Kolcsar, Levente-Peter;Paramonov, Nikolai;Imada, Yume;Kato, Daichi;Gamboa, Maribet;Shinoka, Dai;Kato, Makoto;Watanabe, Kozo	Kolcsar, Levente-Peter, Paramonov, Nikolai, Imada, Yume, Kato, Daichi, Gamboa, Maribet, Shinoka, Dai, Kato, Makoto, Watanabe, Kozo (2022): Notes on the taxonomic status and distribution of some Cylindrotomidae (Diptera, Tipuloidea), with emphasis on Japanese species. ZooKeys 1083: 13-88, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1083.75624, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1083.75624
D1B2E35566A65491AC5B46E84C0AD7F6.text	D1B2E35566A65491AC5B46E84C0AD7F6.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Triogma trisulcata (Schummel 1829)	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
    <body>
        <div>
            <p> Triogma trisulcata (Schummel, 1829)</p>
            <p>Figs 39, 40</p>
            <p> Triogma pulla (Meigen, 1830) </p>
            <p>Non-type material examined.</p>
            <p>Russia • 1 ♂, 1 ♀; Leningrad Oblast, Luzhsky District, around Luga City; 58.74°N, 29.85°E; alt. 40 m; 5 Jun. 1954; A.A. Stackelberg leg.; CKLP. United Kingdom • 2 ♂; Birmingham, Sutton Park, Longmoor Valley; 52.5635°N, 1.8633° W; alt. 125 m; 30 Apr. 2019; P. Boardman leg.; CKLP.</p>
            <p>Supplementary description.</p>
            <p> Male terminalia. Directed caudally. Tergite 9 fused with gonocoxites at base (Fig. 39C). Tergite 9 lateral parts weakly produced, triangular (Fig. 39A, C); posterior margin bent back under tergite 9, forming W-shaped plate (Fig. 39A). Sternite 9 fully membranous (Fig. 39B). Gonocoxite large ~ 1.5-1.6  × longer than tergite 9, without evident ventral or apical lobe (Fig. 39B, C); inner surface hairy. Gonostylus simple, narrowing to end (Fig. 39A, C). Aedeagus complex 1.4  × longer than gonocoxite (Fig. 39C); ejaculatory apodeme medium size, not covered by paramere in lateral view (Fig. 39F); interbase weakly curve dorsally, with small notch at tip in lateral view (Fig. 39F); dorsal lobe between interbases, membranous, bubble-like; sperm ducts branching from elongation of sperm pump, branching area darker (Fig. 39E, F); aedeagus trifid, as wide as interbase at mid-length in lateral view, aedeagus directed ventrally, just tip turning back dorsally (Fig. 39F); medial branch shorter than lateral branches (Fig. 39D-F). </p>
            <p> Female terminalia: Tergite 8, ~ 2  × wider than tergite 9 in lateral view (Fig. 40B); not divided medially, posterior part partly membranous with a few hairs (Fig. 40A). Tergite 9 rectangular in lateral view (Fig. 40B). Triangular of tergite 10 large, fused with tergite 10 (Fig. 40A). Cercus simple, with distinct rugged area at tip; formed by short pyramid teeth (Fig. 40A, B); ventral margin with small, rounded notch at 1/3 of length. Hypogynial valve long, blade-like, shorter than cercus; with transverse ditch at base, holding lateral lobes of male tergite 9 during copulation (Fig. 40B). Common spermathecal duct short; spermathecal ducts carrot-shaped, without clear pattern; suddenly narrow (Fig. 40C); three spermathecae large, irregularly spherical, with comparably long and curved duct (Fig. 40D). </p>
            <p>Distribution.</p>
            <p>Palearctic species, with a wide distribution range in Europe, except the southern parts. Previously reported from Austria, Belgium, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Great Britain, Hungary, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Romania, Russia (North and Central European Russia), Slovakia, Sweden, and Switzerland. It was reported from Eastern Palearctic, but so far only from East Siberia (Irkutsk Oblast), Russia (Oosterbroek 2021).</p>
        </div>
    </body>
</html>
	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/D1B2E35566A65491AC5B46E84C0AD7F6	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Kolcsar, Levente-Peter;Paramonov, Nikolai;Imada, Yume;Kato, Daichi;Gamboa, Maribet;Shinoka, Dai;Kato, Makoto;Watanabe, Kozo	Kolcsar, Levente-Peter, Paramonov, Nikolai, Imada, Yume, Kato, Daichi, Gamboa, Maribet, Shinoka, Dai, Kato, Makoto, Watanabe, Kozo (2022): Notes on the taxonomic status and distribution of some Cylindrotomidae (Diptera, Tipuloidea), with emphasis on Japanese species. ZooKeys 1083: 13-88, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1083.75624, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1083.75624
