Oeconesus is a genus of caddisflies belonging to the family Oeconesidae.[1] The genus was first recognised by Robert McLachlan in 1862.[2] All known species of Oeconesus are endemic to New Zealand.

Oeconesus
The type species Oeconesus maori seen in situ in the Hutt Valley, New Zealand
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Trichoptera
Family: Oeconesidae
Genus: Oeconesus
McLachlan, 1862
Species[1]

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Type specimen of Oeconesus lobatus from the collections of Auckland War Memorial Museum

Taxonomy

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Robert McLachlan in 1862 originally placed the genus within the family Sericostomatidae.[2] This was revised in 1921 when Robert John Tillyard placed Oeconesus within the family Oeconesidae. Tillyard designated Oeconesus as the type genus of the family.[3][4] McLachlan designated Oeconesus maori as the type species of the genus.[2] Genetically, Oeconesus forms a clade with three other Oeconesidae genera: Tarapsyche, Pseudoeconesus and Zelandopsyche.[5]

Description

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McLachlan's original text (the type description) reads as follows:

Male. — Antennae about the length of the wings, basal joint short, and rather thick, not so long as the head; head quadrate; maxillary palpi oval-elongate, much swollen, curved up in front of the head, their apices, viewed from above, appearing as two rounded tubercles between the antennae, moderately hairy; labial palpi with the basal joint short, second and third of equal length, long; anterior tibiae with two short spurs, intermediate and posterior, each with four long unequal spurs.

Anterior wings rather short and broad, very slightly hairy, the costa much arched, apical margin almost straight; the costa from the base to the pterostigma is narrowly folded inwards; discoidal cell long and narrow, the ramus thyrifer does not fork before the anastomosis, and from this cause there are only eight apical cells; the anastomosis is complete and very oblique from the third apical cell, the lower part is not connected with the inner margin by a transverse vein, and the last apical cell is continued from the apex to near the base of the wing, the apical portion being very broad; near the base of the third apical cell in all four wings is a small round hyaline spot; posterior wings broad, folded; discoidal cell short and triangular.

This genus, although very characteristic of the family, differs in a marked degree from all others. The anomalous arrangement of the venation is somewhat extraordinary, even in this family, where singularity of structure appears to be the rule.[2]

Distribution

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The genus is found in New Zealand.[1]

Species

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References

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  1. ^ a b c "Oeconesus". Global Biodiversity Information Facility. Retrieved 9 August 2024.
  2. ^ a b c d McLachlan, R. (1862). "Characters of new species of exotic Trichoptera". Transactions of the Entomological Society of London. 1 (3): 301–311. ISSN 2053-2520. Wikidata Q128791005.  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  3. ^ Tillyard, R. J. (1921). "Studies of New Zealand Trichoptera, or Caddis-flies: No. 1, Description of a New Genus and Species belonging to the Family Sericostomatidae". Transactions and Proceedings of the Royal Society of New Zealand. 53: 346–350. ISSN 1176-6166. Wikidata Q128791036.
  4. ^ Neboiss, A. (June 1975). "The family Oeconesidae (Trichoptera) from New Zealand and Tasmania". Australian Entomological Magazine. 2 (4): 79–84. ISSN 0311-1881. Wikidata Q100149604.
  5. ^ Hogg, Ian D; Smith, Brian J; Banks, Jonathan C; Dewaard, Jeremy R; Hebert, Paul DN (2009). "Testing use of mitochondrial COI sequences for the identification and phylogenetic analysis of New Zealand caddisflies (Trichoptera)". New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research. 43 (5): 1137–1146. doi:10.1080/00288330.2009.9626536. hdl:10289/3545. ISSN 0028-8330.