Rowland M. Shelley, Chris T. McAllister
Western North American Naturalist 67 (2), 258-269, (1 April 2007) https://doi.org/10.3398/1527-0904(2007)67[258:DOTMGA]2.0.CO;2
KEYWORDS: Apheloria, Apheloria virginiensis, Apheloria virginiensis reducta, Apheloria virginiensis iowa, Fontaria luminosa, Mississippi River
The milliped genus Apheloria occupies a broad area in Québec and Ontario, Canada, and the United States east of the Central Plains, lying generally north of the Gulf Coastal states. It is reported for the 1st time from New Jersey, District of Columbia, Illinois, and Kansas; and the 1st localities are recorded for Massachusetts, Connecticut, South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, and Wisconsin. The projected distribution encompasses all or parts of the District of Columbia and 27 states, including Vermont and Delaware, where the genus has not been taken; New Hampshire and Mississippi lie outside the range. Chesapeake Bay and the Connecticut River form apparent eastern boundaries in Maryland–Virginia and New England, respectively; the Tennessee River does likewise on the south in northern Alabama. Aside from Arkansas, comparatively few records exist from the 6 projected states of occurrence west of the Mississippi River. Only 1 each is available from Iowa and Kansas, and there are no definite localities in Nebraska, where occurrence is postulated at Omaha, the type locality of Fontaria luminosa Kenyon, 1893. Confirmation with fresh material is necessary, but this name seems referrable to Apheloria and may be senior to either A. virginiensis iowa or A. v. reducta, both by Chamberlin, 1939, if 2 distinct races occur west of the Mississippi River.