Oemopteryx contorta ( Needham & Claassen, 1925 )

Myers, Luke William, Kondratieff, Boris C, Grubbs, Scott A, Pett, Lindsey A, DeWalt, R. Edward, Mihuc, Timothy B & Hart, Lily Veronica, 2025, Distributional and species richness patterns of the stoneflies (Insecta, Plecoptera) in New York State, Biodiversity Data Journal 13, pp. e 158952-e 158952 : e158952-

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.3897/BDJ.13.e158952

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.16876210

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E711CF72-009B-546A-95AA-BBA382037521

treatment provided by

Biodiversity Data Journal by Pensoft

scientific name

Oemopteryx contorta ( Needham & Claassen, 1925 )
status

 

Oemopteryx contorta ( Needham & Claassen, 1925) View in CoL

Notes

This species is commonly referred to as the Dark Willowfly ( Stark et al. 2012). Oemopteryx contorta is distributed along the Appalachian Mountains from Maine southwest to North Carolina and Tennessee ( Stewart 2000, DeWalt et al. 2024, Verdone et al. 2025). Nelson (1982) studied the life history of this species in Tennessee and found that larvae exhibited a univoltine-slow life cycle. Larvae were first collected in October, and adult emergence occurred in April. In New York, this species is uncommon and apparently restricted to smaller streams with records available from Level IV Ecoregions Glaciated Reading Prong / Hudson Highlands (58 i), Taconic Foothills (58 x), Adirondack High Peaks (58 z), Central Adirondacks (58 ad), and Catskills Transition (60 c) (Fig. 21 f View Figure 21 f ). Adults have been collected from early March through late April (Fig. 22 View Figure 22 ) from small, cold streams at elevations ranging from 234-480 m asl (Fig. 23 View Figure 23 ).