Aquarius (bug)
Genus of true bugs From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Aquarius is a genus of water striders found predominantly in the northern hemisphere. Formerly a subgenus, Aquarius was elevated to generic rank in 1990 on the basis of phylogenetic analysis.[1][2] These are among the world's largest water striders, with females averaging 12–17 mm (0.47–0.67 in) long and males roughly 10–30% smaller, depending on the exact species. An outlier is A. elongatus where both sexes typically are about 24 mm (0.94 in), roughly the same as certain Cylindrostethus, and second only to Gigantometra gigas.[3]
Aquarius | |
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Aquarius najas | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Class: | Insecta |
Order: | Hemiptera |
Suborder: | Heteroptera |
Infraorder: | Gerromorpha |
Superfamily: | Gerroidea |
Family: | Gerridae |
Subfamily: | Gerrinae |
Genus: | Aquarius Schellenberg, 1800 |
Species
There are 17 species in the genus Aquarius:[4]
- Aquarius adelaidis (Dohrn, 1860)
- Aquarius amplus (Drake & Harris, 1938)
- Aquarius antigone (Kirkaldy, 1899)
- Aquarius chilensis (Berg, 1881)
- Aquarius cinereus (Puton, 1869)
- Aquarius conformis (Uhler, 1878)
- Aquarius distanti (Horváth, 1899)
- Aquarius elongatus (Uhler, 1896)
- Aquarius fabricii Andersen, 1990
- Aquarius lili D.A. Polhemus & J.T. Polhemus, 1994
- Aquarius najas (De Geer, 1773)
- Aquarius nebularis (Drake & Hottes, 1925)
- Aquarius paludum (Fabricius, 1794)
- Aquarius philippinensis Zettel & Ruiz, 2003
- Aquarius remigis (Say, 1832)
- Aquarius remigoides Gallant & Fairbairn, 1996
- Aquarius ventralis (Fieber, 1861)
References
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