Amphinemura banksi
- Baumann and Gaufin, 1972
Rockies Forestfly
Taxonomic Status: Accepted
Related ITIS Name(s):
Amphinemura banksi Baumann and Gaufin, 1972 (TSN 102546)
French Common Names: Némoure de Banks
Unique Identifier: ELEMENT_GLOBAL.2.114444
Element Code: IIPLE0H020
Informal Taxonomy: Animals, Invertebrates
- Insects
- Stoneflies
Kingdom |
Phylum |
Class |
Order |
Family |
Genus |
Animalia |
Mandibulata |
Insecta |
Plecoptera |
Nemouridae |
Amphinemura |
Check this box to expand all report sections:
Concept Reference
Concept Reference: Stark, B.P. 1996. Last updated 16 February 2001. North American Stonefly List. Online. Available: http://www.mc.edu/campus/users/stark/Sfly0102.htm.
Concept Reference Code: N96STA01EHUS
Name Used in Concept Reference: Amphinemura banksi
Conservation Status
NatureServe Status
Global Status: G5
Global Status Last Reviewed: 28Sep2009
Global Status Last Changed: 18Jun1998
Rounded Global Status: G5 - Secure
Reasons: Range includes the Central Rocky Mountains and across northern North America.
Nation: United States
National Status: N5
(18Jun1998)
Nation: Canada
National Status: NU
(28Apr2017)
U.S. & Canada State/Province Status
Due to latency between updates made in state, provincial or other
NatureServe Network databases and when they appear on NatureServe Explorer,
for state or provincial information you may wish to contact the data steward
in your jurisdiction to obtain the most current data.
Please refer to our Distribution Data Sources to find
contact information for your jurisdiction.
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United States
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Arizona (SNR), Colorado (SNR), Idaho (SNR), Montana (SNR), New Mexico (SNR), South Dakota (SNR), Utah (S3?), Wyoming (SNR)
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Canada
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Alberta (SU)
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Other Statuses
NatureServe Global Conservation Status Factors
Range Extent: 200,000-2,500,000 square km (about 80,000-1,000,000 square miles)
Range Extent Comments: Range includes the Rocky Mountains as far north as Alberta (Steward and Oswood, 2006).
Number of Occurrences: > 300
Number of Occurrences Comments: Gaufin et al. (1972) cite Montana distribution as Gallatin, Glacier, Judith Basin, and Lewis and Clark Cos. Baumann (1973) listed it for Utah. Call and Baumann (2002) cite southern Utah distribution as the Abajo and LaSal Mountains and sporadically innorthern Utah. In the Pacific Northwest, it occurs in Alberta, Alaska, British Columbia, Northwest Territory, and Yukon (Steward and Oswood, 2006). Newell et al. (2006) report it from Glacier National Park in western Montana.
Population Size: Unknown
Number of Occurrences with Good Viability/Integrity: Unknown
Other NatureServe Conservation Status Information
Distribution
Global Range:
(200,000-2,500,000 square km (about 80,000-1,000,000 square miles))
Range includes the Rocky Mountains as far north as Alberta (Steward and Oswood, 2006).
U.S. States and Canadian Provinces
Due to latency between updates made in state, provincial or other
NatureServe Network databases and when they appear on NatureServe Explorer,
for state or provincial information you may wish to contact the data steward
in your jurisdiction to obtain the most current data.
Please refer to
our Distribution Data Sources to find
contact information for your jurisdiction.
Endemism: occurs (regularly, as a native taxon) in multiple nations
U.S. & Canada State/Province Distribution
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United States
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AZ, CO, ID, MT, NM, SD, UT, WY
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Canada
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AB
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Range MapNo map available.
Ecology & Life History
Reproduction Comments: Adults commonly emerge from early July through September in Montana (Gaufin et al., 1972).
Habitat Type: Freshwater
Non-Migrant: N
Locally Migrant: N
Long Distance Migrant: N
Riverine Habitat(s): CREEK, MEDIUM RIVER
Lacustrine Habitat(s): Shallow water
Habitat Comments: It is common in streams and small lakes (Gaufin et al., 1972).
Economic Attributes
Not yet assessed
Management Summary
Not yet assessed
Population/Occurrence Delineation
Group Name: Stoneflies
Use Class: Not applicable
Minimum Criteria for an Occurrence: Occurrences are based on some evidence of historical presence or current presence of single or multiple specimens (including nymphs or adults) at a given location with potentially recurring existence. Evidence is derived from reliable published observation or collection data; unpublished, though documented (i.e. government or agency reports, web sites, etc.) observation or collection data; or museum specimen information. A photograph may be accepted as documentation of an element occurrence for adults only (nymphs and subimagos are too difficult to identify in this manner) provided that the photograph shows diagnostic features that clearly delineate the species from other species with similar features. Sight records, though valuable, should not be accepted as the basis for element occurrences. Instead, such records should be utilized to further study an area to verify the element occurrence in that area.
Separation Barriers: Within catchments there are likely no significant barriers to movement of adults between microhabitats, with even extensive sections of inappropriate waterway or major obstructions to flow being readily traversed by adults during dispersal following emergence.
Separation Distance for Unsuitable Habitat: 3 km
Separation Distance for Suitable Habitat: 3 km
Alternate Separation Procedure:
None
Separation Justification: Stoneflies (Order Plecoptera) are a relatively small insect order with an immature larval stage that is entirely aquatic in North America. Nymphs of most genera occur in cold lotic habitats, with several occurring in warm lotic systems, comparatively few in cold lentic habitats, and none in warm lentic habitats (Baumann, 1979). Dispersal is primarily accomplished stochastically by nymphs and actively by winged adults; although the adult of Capnia lacustra Jewett, 1965, is entirely aquatic (Jewett, 1962) and Capnura fibula (Claassen, 1924), and Allocapnia vivipara (Claassen, 1924) are apparently wingless (Jewett, 1960). Numbers of described North American species (in nine families) have steadily grown from 350 (Jewett, 1960) to 537 (Stark et al., 1986) to 550 (Stewart and Stark, 1993) to 575 (DeWalt and Stewart, 1995) and most recently 614 (Stark et al., 1998).
Separation distances (unsuitable and suitable) have been set at three km based upon several life history characteristics that limit occurrences to the area of emergence, among them: (1) most stoneflies require some form of moving water for development of nymphs (Hynes in Stark and Armitage, 2000; Jewett, 1960); (2) although some species occur in cool lentic habitats, no stonefly genera occur in warm lentic habitats and most cool lentic taxa live along active, wave-swept areas of shorelines (Hynes in Stark and Armitage, 2000; Stark et al., 1996); (3) although drift does occur for some species, drft tendency is low for stoneflies (Stewart and Szczytko, 1983); (4) stonefly adults generally remain in the area (within m) of larval emergence and mate on nearby solid substratum (Brittain, 1990; Bubb et al., 2004; Cummins and Merritt, 1996); (5) the known life cycle of North American stoneflies is either univoltine (one year) or semivoltine (two or three years) (Hynes in Stark and Armitage, 2000; Stewart and Ricker, 1997; Stewart and Stark, 1993); (6) flying ability (particularly for adult females) is not strong with dispersal rarely exceeding a few km (Malmqvist, 2000) wherein, according to Stewart and Stark (1993), "most students of plecopteran biogeography have emphasized low vagility of adult stoneflies and the necessity for former land bridges or vicariant events to account for range disjunctions"; (7) recently, limited wind-driven dispersal of adults between tributaries has been demonstrated wherein Bubb et al. (2004) showed that between 0.1% and 0.2% of a population of Leuctra inermis moved a distance of 1 km while a very small percentage of a population of Peltoperla tarteri demonstrated genetic flow over 0.5 to 2.0 km (Schultheis et al., 2002).
Date: 18Oct2004
Author: Cordeiro, J.
Population/Occurrence Viability
U.S. Invasive Species Impact Rank (I-Rank)
Not yet assessed
Authors/Contributors
NatureServe Conservation Status Factors Edition Date: 28Sep2009
NatureServe Conservation Status Factors Author: Cordeiro, J.
Element Ecology & Life History Edition Date: 31Dec2009
Element Ecology & Life History Author(s): Cordeiro, J.
Zoological data developed by NatureServe and its network of
natural heritage programs (see Local Programs) and other contributors and cooperators (see Sources).
References
- Baumann, R.W. 1973. Studies on Utah stoneflies (Plecoptera). Great Basin Naturalist 33:91-108.
- Call, R.G. and R.W. Baumann. 2002. Stoneflies (Plecoptera) of southern Utah with an updated checklist of Utah species. Monographs of the Western North American Naturalist 1:65-89.
- Gaufin, A.R., E.R. Ricker, M. Miner, P. Milam, and R.A. Hays. 1972. The stoneflies (Plecoptera) of Montana. Transactions of the American Entomological Society 98(1):1-161.
- Huntsman, B.O., R.W. Baumann, and B.C. Kondratieff. 2001. The stoneflies (Plecoptera) of South Dakota. Entomological News, 112(2): 104-111.
- Jacobi, G.Z., S.J. Cary, and R.W. Baumann. 2005. An updated list of the stoneflies (Plecoptera) of New Mexico, U.S.A. Entomological News 116(1): 29-34
- Newell, R.L., R.W. Baumann, and J.A. Stanford. 2006. Pages 173-186 in F.R. Hauer, J.A. Stanford, and R.L. Newell. 2006. International Advances in the Ecology, Zoogeography, and Systematics of Mayflies and Stoneflies. University of California Press, Ecology series, Volume 128. 311 pp.
- Stark, B. P., K. W. Stewart, S. W. Szczytko, R. W. Baumann, and B. C. Kondratieff. 2012. Scientific and common names of Nearctic stoneflies (Plecoptera), with corrections and additions to the list. The Caddis Press, Miscellaneous Contribution No. 1. 20 pp.
- Stark, B.P. 1996. Last updated 16 February 2001. North American Stonefly List. Online. Available: http://www.mc.edu/campus/users/stark/Sfly0102.htm.
- Stewart, K.W. and M.W. Oswood. 2006. The Stoneflies (Plecoptera) of Alaska and Western Canada. The Caddis Press: Columbus, Ohio. 325 pp.
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