Sweltsa wui, Stark & Sivec, 2009

Stark, Bill P. & Sivec, Ignac, 2009, Sweltsa Wui And Haploperla Valentinae (Plecoptera: Chloroperlidae), Two New Stoneflies From Sichuan Province, China, Illiesia 5 (14), pp. 156-163 : 157-162

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.4759387

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4765867

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C5181C-FFA2-2976-FEE1-F9DAFCE86290

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Sweltsa wui
status

sp. nov.

Sweltsa wui View in CoL sp. n.

( Figs. 1-8 View Figs View Figs )

Material examined. Holotype ♂ and 3 ♂ paratypes from China, Sichuan Province, Pitiao River, Welong, Balangshan Pass , 2700-4000 m, 1-4 June 1991, B. Horvat & I. Sivec ( PMSL, 1 paratype-BPS).

Adult habitus. General color pale yellow in alcohol but with a distinctive, narrowly divided, median, pronotal band ( Fig. 1 View Figs ) and obscure interocellar brown spot; meso and metathoracic notae with dark brown U-patterns, and abdomen bearing a continuous brown longitudinal band on segments 1-8; tergum 9 with a small, basal dumbbell shaped brown spot. Wings transparent, legs pale.

Male. Forewing length 9.5 mm. Tergum 9 without transverse process and without median excavation on posterior margin ( Figs. 5-6 View Figs ). Epiproct about 2.5 X longer than basal width, rod-like but with lateral margins slightly constricted from near base to apical third. Epiproct length ca. 343 µm, subapical width ca. 129 µm, basal width ca. 138 µm, width at narrowest point ca. 71 µm. Epiproct apex a smooth, sclerotized cap but most of dorsal and ventral surface covered with golden brown, closely appressed setae ( Figs. 2- 4 View Figs , 5-8 View Figs ); base with dorsal and lateral bare areas ( Figs. 6-7 View Figs ). Epiproct apex slightly inflated in lateral aspect ( Figs. 4 View Figs , 7 View Figs ).

Female. Unknown.

Larva. Unknown.

Etymology. We dedicate this species to the late Professor Dr. C.F. Wu in recognition of his enormous contribution to the knowledge of Chinese Plecoptera .

Diagnosis. This species is similar in pronotal pigment pattern to Sweltsa insularis ( Zhiltzova & Levanidova 1978) , S. nikkoensis (Okamoto) ( Ham 2008 ), and also to the Japanese species S. abdominalis (Okamoto) and S. sapporoensis (Okamoto) , however the general shape and setal pattern of the epiproct is different among these species [except S. sapporensis ( Figs. 22-24 View Figs ) and S. nikkoensis ( Figs. 25-27 View Figs ) which are quite similar]. Sweltsa wui is the only known Asian species in which the epiproct apex is as wide as, or wider than, the base ( Figs. 5-6 View Figs ).

The species of genus Sweltsa are quite variable in epiproct structure and several species complexes in the group may at some time be given generic rank. The structure of tergum 9 in S. wui suggests it could be placed in another genus. A few, unrelated Nearctic species are also known to lack the transverse process ( Kondratieff & Baumann 2009), but these species have the posterior margin of tergum 9 strongly concave as in other Nearctic members of the genus. Our study of Asian Sweltsa indicates two Japanese species, S. abdominalis ( Figs. 19-21 View Figs ) and S. sapporoensis ( Figs. 22-24 View Figs ) share the tergum 9 modifications with Nearctic members of the group but also share a similar color pattern with S. wui . In addition, S. insularis , a similarly pigmented Russian species, also lacks the tergal 9 modification ( Figs. 28- 30 View Figs ), but S. colorata (= S. nikkoensis ), another Russian species with similar pigment, has a well developed process on tergum 9 ( Figs. 25-27 View Figs ). Consequently, in the absence of data from other life stages, we are tentatively placing the new species in genus Sweltsa .

PMSL

Slovenian Museum of Natural History (Prirodosloveni Muzej Slovenije)

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Plecoptera

Family

Chloroperlidae

Genus

Sweltsa

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