Allocapnia vivipara ( Claassen, 1924 )

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.16876120

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/D8BF5FBA-FD1F-5639-83EE-B34F8C4F43FC

treatment provided by

Biodiversity Data Journal by Pensoft

scientific name

Allocapnia vivipara ( Claassen, 1924 )
status

 

Allocapnia vivipara ( Claassen, 1924) View in CoL

Notes

Allocapnia vivipara is commonly referred to as the Shortwing Snowfly ( Stark et al. 2012). This species is distributed in a diagonal band from southern Ontario and Quebec west to Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Nebraska, and Oklahoma ( Ross and Ricker 1971, DeWalt et al. 2024). Males are apterous and have been reported from a wide range of stream sizes and can be especially abundant in nutrient rich streams ( Ross and Ricker 1971). In New York, adults of A. vivipara have been collected from mid-February through mid-April (Fig. 7 View Figure 7 ) from streams and rivers in agricultural areas at elevations of 32-496 m asl (Fig. 9 View Figure 9 ). This species distribution is primarily centered along the Great Lakes Plain and other lowland valleys in the state, but it is still able to colonize some areas of higher elevation in Level IV Ecoregion Northern and Western Adirondack Foothills (58 ab) (Fig. 12 b View Figure 12 b ).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Plecoptera

Family

Capniidae

Genus

Allocapnia