Lispe odessae Becker, 1904
publication ID |
https://doi.org/10.33910/2686-9519-2020-12-2-158-188 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:8F60709F-933E-4219-BB23-C13FF4CADAB9 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A0FC6C-1F55-FFEE-DCD6-91F3FE7CA87E |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Lispe odessae Becker, 1904 |
status |
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Lispe odessae Becker, 1904 View in CoL
Fig. 50 View Figs 47–50
Lispe odessae Becker, 1904 View in CoL ( Hennig 1960) Lispe caesia Meigen, 1826 View in CoL : misidentification by Canzoneri & Meneghini ( Vikhrev et al. 2016) Lispe caesia Meigen, 1826 View in CoL ( Pont 1986)
Lispe caesia microchaeta Séguy, 1940 View in CoL ( Zhang et al. 2016)
Lispe odessae Becker, 1904 ( Vikhrev et al. 2016)
Material examined: see Vikhrev et al. (2016). New record: RUSSIA, Tuva reg., Dus-Khol salt L., 700 m asl, 51.36°N 94.45°E, 2–5 July 2017, N. Vikhrev, 3♂ ( ZMUM) GoogleMaps .
Distribution. Palaearctic, from E Europe to Asian Far East: China: Liaoning and Xinjiang prov.; Kazakhstan: Kyzylorda and W. Kazakhstan reg.; Mongolia, Omnogovi prov.; Russia: Astrakhan, Kalmykia, Orenburg, Tuva and Volgograd reg.; Turkmenistan, Mary reg.; Ukraine, Odessa reg. Inland salt basins and estuaries at sea shores.
Lispe orientalis Wiedemann, 1824 Lispe orientalis Wiedemann, 1824 ( Hennig 1960; Vikhrev 2014)
Material examined: see Vikhrev (2011; 2014).
Distribution. In Palaearctic known from: Egypt ( Sinai), Israel, Turkey, Russia ( Krasnodar and Primorsky reg.), Iran, Azerbaijan, Pakistan, Tajikistan, Korea, widespread in China. Widespread in highland localities in the Oriental region. L. orientalis prefers dirty, organically polluted water.
ZMUM |
Zoological Museum, University of Amoy |
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