Three New Species of the Genus Kisaura (Trichoptera, Philopotamidae) from Indian Himalaya

Иллюстрированное описание Kisaura malickyi sp. n. и K. bhagati sp. n. из Уттараханда и K. kanchenjungaensis sp. n. из Сиккима. Kisaura malickyi sp. n., K. bhagati sp. n. from Uttarakhand, and K. kanchenjungaensis sp. n. from Sikkim are described and illustrated in this paper....

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Published in:Вестник зоологии
Date:2012
Main Authors: Saini, M.S., Pandher, M.S., Ramamurthy, V.V.
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Language:English
Published: Інститут зоології ім. І.І. Шмальгаузена НАН України 2012
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Cite this:Three New Species of the Genus Kisaura (Trichoptera, Philopotamidae) from Indian Himalaya / M.S. Saini, M.S. Pandher, V.V. Ramamurthy // Вестник зоологии. — 2012. — Т. 46, № 6. — С. 509–514. — Бібліогр.: 20 назв. — англ.

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Digital Library of Periodicals of National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine
id nasplib_isofts_kiev_ua-123456789-109575
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spelling Saini, M.S.
Pandher, M.S.
Ramamurthy, V.V.
2016-12-02T19:47:59Z
2016-12-02T19:47:59Z
2012
Three New Species of the Genus Kisaura (Trichoptera, Philopotamidae) from Indian Himalaya / M.S. Saini, M.S. Pandher, V.V. Ramamurthy // Вестник зоологии. — 2012. — Т. 46, № 6. — С. 509–514. — Бібліогр.: 20 назв. — англ.
0084-5604
DOI 10.2478/v10058-012-0044-7
https://nasplib.isofts.kiev.ua/handle/123456789/109575
595.73(540:292.536)
Иллюстрированное описание Kisaura malickyi sp. n. и K. bhagati sp. n. из Уттараханда и K. kanchenjungaensis sp. n. из Сиккима.
Kisaura malickyi sp. n., K. bhagati sp. n. from Uttarakhand, and K. kanchenjungaensis sp. n. from Sikkim are described and illustrated in this paper.
The authors are indebted to Dr. John Morse (Clemson University, USA) for providing important literature, valuable suggestions and guidance during the research. We greatly appreciate the support provided in the form of the relevant literature for the Oriental as well as Palaearctic Region by Dr. Hans Malicky, Austria. Sincere thanks are also due to the parent institute, Punjabi University, Patiala, for providing necessary facilities for the present research. Financial assistance rendered by Indian Council of Agricultural Research (NPIB 21—17) Govt. of India is gratefully acknowledged. Last, but not least, authors are thankful to the PCCF’s, CCF’s, DFO, and other forest authorities of Uttarakhand and Sikkim for their help and cooperation during the expedition to these states.
en
Інститут зоології ім. І.І. Шмальгаузена НАН України
Вестник зоологии
Фауна и систематика
Three New Species of the Genus Kisaura (Trichoptera, Philopotamidae) from Indian Himalaya
Три новых вида рода Kisaura (Trichoptera, Philopotamidae) из Индийских Гималаев
Article
published earlier
institution Digital Library of Periodicals of National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine
collection DSpace DC
title Three New Species of the Genus Kisaura (Trichoptera, Philopotamidae) from Indian Himalaya
spellingShingle Three New Species of the Genus Kisaura (Trichoptera, Philopotamidae) from Indian Himalaya
Saini, M.S.
Pandher, M.S.
Ramamurthy, V.V.
Фауна и систематика
title_short Three New Species of the Genus Kisaura (Trichoptera, Philopotamidae) from Indian Himalaya
title_full Three New Species of the Genus Kisaura (Trichoptera, Philopotamidae) from Indian Himalaya
title_fullStr Three New Species of the Genus Kisaura (Trichoptera, Philopotamidae) from Indian Himalaya
title_full_unstemmed Three New Species of the Genus Kisaura (Trichoptera, Philopotamidae) from Indian Himalaya
title_sort three new species of the genus kisaura (trichoptera, philopotamidae) from indian himalaya
author Saini, M.S.
Pandher, M.S.
Ramamurthy, V.V.
author_facet Saini, M.S.
Pandher, M.S.
Ramamurthy, V.V.
topic Фауна и систематика
topic_facet Фауна и систематика
publishDate 2012
language English
container_title Вестник зоологии
publisher Інститут зоології ім. І.І. Шмальгаузена НАН України
format Article
title_alt Три новых вида рода Kisaura (Trichoptera, Philopotamidae) из Индийских Гималаев
description Иллюстрированное описание Kisaura malickyi sp. n. и K. bhagati sp. n. из Уттараханда и K. kanchenjungaensis sp. n. из Сиккима. Kisaura malickyi sp. n., K. bhagati sp. n. from Uttarakhand, and K. kanchenjungaensis sp. n. from Sikkim are described and illustrated in this paper.
issn 0084-5604
url https://nasplib.isofts.kiev.ua/handle/123456789/109575
citation_txt Three New Species of the Genus Kisaura (Trichoptera, Philopotamidae) from Indian Himalaya / M.S. Saini, M.S. Pandher, V.V. Ramamurthy // Вестник зоологии. — 2012. — Т. 46, № 6. — С. 509–514. — Бібліогр.: 20 назв. — англ.
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AT pandherms threenewspeciesofthegenuskisauratrichopteraphilopotamidaefromindianhimalaya
AT ramamurthyvv threenewspeciesofthegenuskisauratrichopteraphilopotamidaefromindianhimalaya
AT sainims trinovyhvidarodakisauratrichopteraphilopotamidaeizindiiskihgimalaev
AT pandherms trinovyhvidarodakisauratrichopteraphilopotamidaeizindiiskihgimalaev
AT ramamurthyvv trinovyhvidarodakisauratrichopteraphilopotamidaeizindiiskihgimalaev
first_indexed 2025-11-24T06:09:14Z
last_indexed 2025-11-24T06:09:14Z
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fulltext UDC 595.73(540:292.536) THREE NEW SPECIES OF THE GENUS KISAURA (TRICHOPTERA, PHILOPOTAMIDAE) FROM INDIAN HIMALAYA M. S. Saini1, M. S. Pandher1*, V. V. Ramamurthy2 1 Department of Zoology and Environmental Sciences, Punjabi University, Patiala, India – 147002 2 Division of Entomology, Indian Agricultural Research Institute, Pusa, New Delhi, India – 110012 * Corresponding author. E-mail: mpandher.iari@gmail.com Received 23 April 2012 Accepted 21 November 2012 Three New Species of the Genus Kisaura (Trichoptera, Philopotamidae) from Indian Himalaya. Saini M. S., Pandher M. S., Ramamurthy V. V. – Kisaura malickyi sp. n., K. bhagati sp. n. from Uttarakhand, and K. kanchenjungaensis sp. n. from Sikkim are described and illustrated in this paper. Ke y wo r d s: Trichoptera, Philopotamidae, Oriental Region, Himalayan region, India. Òðè íîâûõ âèäà ðîäà Kisaura (Trichoptera, Philopotamidae) èç Èíäèéñêèõ Ãèìàëàåâ. Ñàèíè Ì. Ñ., Ïàíäõåð Ì. Ñ, Ðàìàìóðòè Â. Â. – Èëëþñòðèðîâàííîå îïèñàíèå Kisaura malickyi sp. n. è K. bha- gati sp. n. èç Óòòàðàõàíäà è K. kanchenjungaensis sp. n. èç Ñèêêèìà. Êëþ÷åâûå ñ ëîâ à: Trichoptera, Philopotamidae, Îðèåíòàëüíàÿ îáëàñòü, Ãèìàëàéñêèé ðåãèîí, Èíäèÿ. Introduction The genus Kisaura Ross, 1956 was originally established by as a subgenus of the genus Sortosa Navas, 1918 (actually Dolophilodes Ulmer (Kuhara 1999), based on Sortosa obrussa Ross (1956). Malicky (1993 b, 1995), Mey (1996), Sun et al. (2001), and Sun, Malicky, (2002) considered it a separate genus, though Kuhara (1999) kept it as subgenus of Dolophilodes. In addition to the characters specified by Ross (1956), species of the genus can also be distinguished by the variation in the shape and length of lateral spiniform processes of tergum X and the black comb-like setae on apical segment of inferior appendage. Up to date Kisaura Ross includes about 56 species all over the world, most of them are confined to the Oriental and Palaearctic Regions (Morse, 2012). 36 species of this genus occur only in the Oriental Region, and for this reason, it was thought to have originated in the Oriental Region (Ross, 1956). Twenty of 56 spe- scies were transferred to Kisuara from Dolophilodes Ulmer. Most of the recent additions to this genus are made by Malicky with co-workers (Malicky, 1993 a, 1993 b, 1995, 2007, 2009; Malicky, Chantaramongkol 1993 a, 1993 b; Sun, Malicky 2002; Olah, Malicky, 2010), who added 18 species from Thailand, Bhutan, China, Laos and Vietnam to this genus. Recently, this genus was reported this genus for the first time from India with descrip- tion of six new species from Indian Himalaya (Pandher, Saini 2011). The biology of the species in the genus is poorly known (Hur, Morse 2006). A more thorough study and complete diagnosis of all previously known and newly described species is required, along with a study of the larval stages and a well supported phylogenetic analysis, to understand the origin and dispersal of Kisaura to other parts of Eastern Asia. Material and methods Adult Kisaura were collected by light traps (mercury vapour bulb and UV) near streams of high altitude on the Himalayan belt of India. The specimens were preserved in 70 % ethyl alcohol with a drop of glycerol added. Pertinent collection and locality data were recorded. The male genitalia were removed from the specimens and put in 10 % KOH solution overnight. After this treatment the genitalia were put in 80 % ethyl alcohol with a drop of glycerol and observed for morpho- logical characters. The drawings of various aspects were done with the aid of zoom stereoscopic binocular micro- scope (with maximum magnification of 160×) fitted with an ocular grid in one eye piece. The final drawings Vestnik zoologii, 46(6): e-25—e-30, 2012 DOI 10.2478/v10058-012-0044-7 Unauthenticated Download Date | 11/30/16 10:47 PM were rendered in black ink. The illustrations were scanned at 600 dpi grayscale, and mounted onto plates in Adobe© Photoshop© 7.0. The genitalic terminology follows that of Ross (1956) and Hur, Morse (2006). Type specimens are deposited in the Punjabi University Patiala Museum (PUPM), Department of Zoology and Environmental Sciences, Punjabi University, Patiala. Kisaura Ross Ross, 1956: 27 Type species: Sortosa obrussa Ross 1956: 57 (by original designation). D i a gno s i s. Spurs: 2, 4, 4. Fore- and hind wings with primitive venation except fork I variable: it may be near or considerably beyond sectorial cross vein s, or R2 may be atrophied; 2A of forewing incomplete (Ross, 1956). Male genitalia with pair of later- al processes between Xth tergite and preanal appendages; inferior appendages simple, with mesoventral plate developed between two segments; apical segment of inferior appendage with diagnostic longitudinal row of spine-like setae on its inside mesal surface. Kisaura malickyi Pandher, sp. n. (fig. 1—4, 15—16) Ma t e r i a l e x am in ed. Holotype {, India, Uttarakhand, Shynachatti, 2200 m, 30.98°N, 78.44°E, 27.09.2008, Pandher et Parey, (PUPM). Paratype: 1 {, collection data same as of holotype. De s c r i p t i o n. Adult male; length of forewing about 5 mm, hind wing about 4.25 mm long;. Body uniformly fuscous and covered with inconspicuous, sparse fulvous pubescence while wings are yellowish. Antenna 5 mm long; maxillary palp 1.25 mm long, segment 3 slightly longer than segment 2, segment 5 subequals to segments 1—4 togeth- er; labial palp 0.70 mm long. Forewing with fork I absent; discoidal cell elongate, more e-26 M. S. Saini, M. S. Pandher, V. V. Ramamurthy Fig. 1—4. Male genitalia. Kisaura malickyi sp. n.: 1 – left lateral view; 2 – dorsal view of VIII tergite; 3 – dorsal view; 4 – dorsal view of preanal appendage. Fig. 1—4. Ãåíèòàëèè ñàìöà. Kisaura malickyi sp. n.: 1 – âèä ñëåâà; 2 –VIII òåðãèò, âèä ñâåðõó; 3 – âèä ñâåðõó; 4 – ïðåàíàëüíûé âûðîñò, âèä ñâåðõó. Unauthenticated Download Date | 11/30/16 10:47 PM than twice its width; veins Sc, R, and Cu thickened; pterostigma prominent. Hind wing with fork-I absent (fig. 15—16). Male genitalia (fig. 1—4). Sternite VIII with reduced ventral process, tergite VIII with distal margin medially pointed. Segment IX almost pentagonal in lateral view, antero- laterally with small median prominence, posteroventrally with small process. Inferior appendages, each 2-segmented. Basal joint oval in lateral view, with two lobes, inferior lobe with tuft of long setae. Distal joint almost equals to basal one in length, in lateral view elongate with a narrow apex, comb-like spines arch-shaped in dorsal view inner face with a stout spine at base. Segment X membranous, extending almost to distal margin of basal joint of inferior appendage in dorsal view, at base on each side arise lateral spini- form process, with articulated spinelet at apex, reaching to distal margin of segment IX. Each preanal appendage is clavate, almost equals to lateral spiniform process in length. Phallus membranous, intimately surrounded by segment X and pointed apically. D i s t r i b u t i o n. India: Uttarakhand. D i a gno s i s. This species is allied to Kisaura cina (Malicky and Chantaramongkol 1993 a) reported from Thailand in the shape of preanal appendages and lateral spiniform process. However, in K. malickyi the tergite VIII with distal margin medially pointed in dorsal view and lateral spiniform processes almost equal to the length of preanal appendages in dorsal view whereas in K cina tergite VIII is not pointed medially (smooth distally) and lateral spiniform process are longer than the preanal appendages in dorsal view. E t ymo l o g y. This species is named in honour of Dr. Hans Malicky who has devoted his whole life to the caddisfly systematics. Kisaura bhagati Pandher, sp. n. (fig. 5—8, 13—14) Ma t e r i a l e x am in ed. Holotype {: India, Uttarakhand, Holi, 1600 m, 32.57°N, 76.27°E, 16.09.2008 (Pandher et Parey) (PUPM). Paratypes: 2 {, collection data same as of holotype (PUPM). De s c r i p t i o n. Adult male. Length of forewing 5.5—6.25 mm, length of hindwing 5 mm. Body uniformly fulvous and covered with inconspicuous, sparse fulvous pubescence. Antenna 5 mm long. Maxillary palp 1.75 mm long, segment 3 longer than segment 2, segment 5 is the longest; labial palp 0.80 mm long. Forewing with fork-I absent, discoidal cell elongate (about 0.75 mm long), more than 2.25 times its width. Hind wing with fork I absent (fig. 13—14). Male genitalia (fig. 5—8). Sternite VIII without ventral process, tergite VIII in dor- sal view with posterior margin rounded. Segment IX pentagonal in lateral view, antero- laterally with small median prominence, posteroventrally with small process. Inferior appendages 2-segmented; basal joint laterally with basal 1/3 narrow, and then somewhat widened, so that other portions more or less quadrilateral, posterior margin truncated; distal joint slightly shorter than basal joint, posterodorsal directed, in lateral view, its base broader than rounded apex, the belt of comb-like spines arch-shaped, in dorsal view with a strong spine at base. Segment X membranous, extending to distal margin of basal joint of inferior appendage, bifid medially; lateral spiniform processes with articulated spinelet at each apex, reaching almost to distal margin of segment IX and convergent to sub-apex. Each preanal appendage equals to lateral spiniform processes in length, with apex round- ed and inner and outer margins serrated in dorsal view. Phallus membranous, intimate- ly surrounded by segment X and pointed apically. D i s t r i b u t i o n. India: Uttarakhand. D i a gno s i s. The male genitalia of this new species closely resembles those of K. cina (Malicky et Chantaramongkol, 1993 a) from Thailand and K. malickyi sp. n. in the shape of preanal appendages and lateral spiniform process in lateral view. However it is more close to K. malickyi sp. n. in the shape and length of preanal appendages and lat- eral spiniform process (preanal appendages almost equal to lateral spiniform processes e-27Three New Species of the Genus Kisaura (Trichoptera, Philopotamidae) from Indian Himalaya Unauthenticated Download Date | 11/30/16 10:47 PM in dorsal view). But in K. bhagati segment X is longer in lateral view, tergite VIII with rounded distal margin and apically rounded preanal appendage whereas, segment X short- er, tergite VIII with distal margin medially produced and apically clavate preanal appendage in K. malickyi. E t ymo logy. This species is named in honour of a great patriot Bhagat Singh whose Martyrdom day is celebrated on 23 March. e-28 M. S. Saini, M. S. Pandher, V. V. Ramamurthy Fig. 5—12. Male genitalia. 5—8. Kisaura bhagati sp. n.: 5 – left lateral view: 6 – dorsal view of VIII tergite: 7 – dorsal view: 8 – dorsal view of preanal appendage. 9—12. K. kanchenjungaensis sp. n.: 9 – left lateral view; 10 – dorsal view of VIII tergite; 11– dorsal view; 12 – dorsal view of preanal appendage (IX – segment 9, VIII – segment 8, X – segment 10, PA – preanal appendages, LSPX – lateral spiniform process of tergum X, PH – phallus, INF – inferior appendages). Fig. 5—12. Ãåíèòàëèè ñàìöà. 5—8. Kisaura bhagati sp. n.: 5 – âèä ñëåâà; 6 – VIII òåðãèò, âèä ñâåðõó; 7 – âèä ñâåðõó; 8 – ïðåàíàëüíûé âûðîñò, âèä ñâåðõó. 9—12. K. kanchenjungaensis sp. n.: 9 – âèä ñëåâà; 10 – VIII òåðãèò, âèä ñâåðõó; 11 – âèä ñâåðõó; 12 – ïðåàíàëüíûé âûðîñò, âèä ñâåðõó (IX – 9-é ñåãìåíò, VIII – 8-é ñåãìåíò, X – 10-é ñåãìåíò, PA – ïðåàíàëüíûé âûðîñò, LSPX – ëàòåðàëüíûé øèïîâèä- íûé îòðîñòîê 10-ãî òåðãèòà, PH – ôàëëþñ, INF – íèæíèå îòðîñòêè). Unauthenticated Download Date | 11/30/16 10:47 PM Kisaura kanchenjungaensis Pandher, sp. n. (fig. 9—12, 17—18) Ma t e r i a l e x am in ed. Holotype {: India, Sikkim, Yaksum, 2200 m, 27.37°N, 88.73°E, 8.05.2009 (Pandher et Parey), (PUPM). Paratypes: 2 {, collection data same as of holotype, (PUPM). De sc r i p t i on. Adult male (in alcohol). Forewing length 5.25 mm, hind wing length about 4mm. Body light brown, dorsum of head dark, legs pale, wings hyaline. Maxillary palp 1.25 mm, segment 3 slightly longer than segment 2, segment 5 is the longest; labi- al palp short, 0.50 mm long. Discoidal cell of fore wing long, twice its width; fork I absent. Hind wing with fork I absent (fig. 17—18). Male genitalia (fig. 9—12). Tergite VIII with shallow V-shaped indentation in dor- sal view. In lateral view segment IX long, anterodorsallly produced; posterolaterally quadrate. Inferior appendages 2-segmented; basal joint little longer and stouter than api- cal one, broad at base, narrow towards apex in lateral view, having two lobes, out of which inferior lobe with tuft of long setae; distal joint with curved row of comb-like spines on mesal surface; in dorsal view directed upright and oval in outline. Tergum X membra- nous reaching up to distal margin of basal joint of inferior appendages, lateral spiniform process with spinelet at apex, recurved caudoventrad and then posterad in lateral view, e-29Three New Species of the Genus Kisaura (Trichoptera, Philopotamidae) from Indian Himalaya Fig. 13—18. Wing venation. 13—14. Kisaura bhagati sp. n.: 13 – forewing; 14 – Hind wing. 15—16. K. ma- lickyi sp. n.: 15 – forewing; 16 – Hind wing. 17—18. K. kanchenjungaensis sp. n.: 17 – forewing; 18 – hind- wing (dc – discoidal cell; II, III, IV, V – fork 2, 3, 4 and 5). Fig. 13—18. Æèëêîâàíèå êðûëà. 13—14. Kisaura bhagati sp. n.: 13 – ïåðåäíåå êðûëî; 14 – çàäíåå êðûëî. 15—16. K. malickyi sp. n.: 15 – ïåðåäíåå êðûëî; 16 – çàäíåå êðûëî. 17—18. K. kanchenjungaensis sp. n.: 17 – ïåðåäíåå êðûëî; 18 – çàäíåå êðûëî (dc – äèñêîèäàëüíàÿ ÿ÷åéêà; II, III, IV, V –2, 3, 4 è 5-ÿ ðàçâèëêè). Unauthenticated Download Date | 11/30/16 10:47 PM reaching almost to apex of segment IX. Each preanal appendage as long as segment IX, clavate in lateral view; divergent and truncate in dorsal view. Phallus membranous sur- rounded by tergum X. D i a gno s i s. With respect to the shape of inferior appendages in lateral view this species is very close to Kisaura euphemos Sun and Malicky, 2002 from China. However, in K. kanchenjungaensis sp. n. the lateral spiniform processes of tergum X are small, and of same length as preanal appendages whereas, the lateral spiniform processes are much longer in K. euphemos. Moreover, tergite VIII is with v shaped medial invagination in dor- sal view, segment IX broad and long in lateral view (almost twice its width) in K. kanchen- jungaensis but in K. euphemos tergite VIII produced medially, segment IX as broad as long in lateral view. D i s t r i b u t i o n. India: Sikkim. E t ymo l o g y. This species is named after Kanchenjunga peak located in Sikkim. The authors are indebted to Dr. John Morse (Clemson University, USA) for providing important lite- rature, valuable suggestions and guidance during the research. We greatly appreciate the support provided in the form of the relevant literature for the Oriental as well as Palaearctic Region by Dr. Hans Malicky, Austria. Sincere thanks are also due to the parent institute, Punjabi University, Patiala, for providing necessary facili- ties for the present research. Financial assistance rendered by Indian Council of Agricultural Research (NPIB 21—17) Govt. of India is gratefully acknowledged. Last, but not least, authors are thankful to the PCCF’s, CCF’s, DFO, and other forest authorities of Uttarakhand and Sikkim for their help and cooperation during the expe- dition to these states. Blahnik R. J. Alterosa, a new caddisfly genus from Brazil (Trichoptera: Philopotamidae) // Zootaxa. – 2005. – 991. – P. 1—60. Hur J. M, Morse J. C. Two new species of caddisflies from East Asia (Trichoptera: Philopotamidae, Psychomyiidae) // Insect Science. – 2006. – 13. – P. 217—220. Kimmins D. E. Entomological results from the Swedish expedition 1934 to Burma and British India. Trichoptera (Philopotamidae, genera Wormaldia McLachlan, Doloclanes Banks and Dolophilodes Ulmer) // Arkiv for Zoologi. N. s. – 1955. – 9. – P. 67—92. Kuhara N. Notes on the subgenus Kisaura of the genus Dolophilodes (Trichopera: Philopotamidae) in Japan, with descriptions of three new species // Proceedings of the 9th International Symposium on Trichoptera / Eds H. Malicky, P. Chantaramongkol. – Thailand, Chiang Mai : Faculty of Science, Chiang Mai University, 1999. – P. 175—184. Malicky H. Neue asiatische Köcherfliegen (Trichoptera: Philopotamidae, Polycentropödidae, Psychomyiidae, Ecnomidae, Hydropsychidae, Leptoceridae) // Linzer Biologische Beiträge. – 1993 a. – 25. – S. 1099—1136. Malicky H. Neue asiatische Köcherfliegen (Trichoptera: Rhyacophilidae, Philopotamidae, Ecnomidae und Polycentropodidae) // Entomologische Berichte Luzern. – 1993 b. – 29. – S. 77—88. Malicky H. Neue Köcherfliegen (Trichoptera, Insecta) aus Vietnam // Linzer Biologische Beiträge. – 1995. – 27. – S. 851—885. Malicky H. Kocherfliegen aus Bhutan (Insecta, Trichoptera) // Linzer Biologische Beiträge. – 2007. – 39. – S. 475—517. Malicky H. Beitrage zur Kenntnis asiatischer Trichopteren // Braueria. – 2009. – 36. – S. 11—58. Malicky H., Chantaramongkol P. Neue Trichopteren aus Thailand // Linzer Biologische Beiträge. – 1993 a. – 25. – S. 433—487. Malicky H., Chantaramongkol P. Neue Trichopteren aus Thailand. Teil 2: Rhyacophilidae, Philopotamidae, Polycentropodidae, Ecnomidae, Psychomyiidae, Xiphocentronidae, Helicopsychidae, Odontoceridae // Linzer Biologische Beiträge. – 1993 b. – 25. – S. 1137—1187. Mey W. Die Köcherfliegenfauna des Fan Si Pan-Massivs in Nord-Vietnam. 1. Deschreibung neuer und endemischer arten aus den Unterordunugen Spicipalpia und Annulipalpia (Trichoptera) // Beitraege zur Entomologie. – 1996. – 46 (1). – S. 39—65. Morse J. C. Trichoptera World Checklist. Available from: http://entweb.clemson.edu/database/trichopt/ index.htm (accessed March, 2012). Navas L. Insectos Chilenos // Boletin de la Sociedad Aragonesa de Cinencias Naturales. – 1918. – 17. – P. 212—230. Ross H. H. Evolution and classification of mountain caddisflies // University of Illinois Press. – 1956. – 213 p. Schmid F. Contribution à l’etude des trichoptères neotropicaux V // Tijdschrift voor Entomologie. – 1964. – 107 (6). – P. 307—339. Sun C-H., Gui F-R., Yang L-F. Five New Species of Philopotamidae (Trichoptera) from Yunnan, China // Entomotaxonomia. – 2001. – 23 (3). – P. 193—200. Sun C-H., Malicky H. 22 new species of Philopotamidae (Trichoptera) from China // Linzer Biologische Beiträge. – 2002. – 34 (1). – P. 521—540. Ulmer G. Einige neue exotische Trichopteren // Notes from the Leyden Museum. – 1909. – 31. – S. 125—142. Ulmer G. Kocherfliegen (Trichopteren) von den Sunda-Inseln. Teil III. Larven und Puppender Annulipalpia // Archiv für Hydrobiologie. – 1957. – 23. – S. 109—470. e-30 M. S. Saini, M. S. Pandher, V. V. Ramamurthy Unauthenticated Download Date | 11/30/16 10:47 PM