Perla andalusiaca, Reding, 2023

Reding, Jean-Paul G., 2023, Steps towards a revision of the Perla bipunctata Pictet, 1833 species complex (Plecoptera: Perlidae), Fragmenta entomologica (Frag. Entomol., Roma) 55 (2), pp. 221-262 : 230-231

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.13133/2284-4880/1526

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:59F2DC20-79D2-4A25-A644-92F038F5F337

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/BBA26BF2-D8DF-41A9-86B9-DCCB8CA6A4E9

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:BBA26BF2-D8DF-41A9-86B9-DCCB8CA6A4E9

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Perla andalusiaca
status

sp. nov.

Perla andalusiaca View in CoL sp. n.

( Figs G.1–G View Plate I .15). urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:BBA26BF2-D8DF-41A9-86B9-DCCB8CA6A4E9

Perla maxima View in CoL ; Aubert (1956a: 255); Aubert (1963:79); Picazo Muñoz (1995), in: Sánchez-Ortega et al. (2003)

Perla bipunctata View in CoL ; Tierno de Figueroa et al. (2005, 2015a, 2018); Bo et al. (2008); López-Rodríguez et al. (2012); Luzón-Ortega et al. (2013) Sanz et al. (2014, 2017). Morphological diagnosis. Males and females macropterous. Body length of males 18–26 mm; of females 20–34 mm. Body colour dark brown. Head mostly yellow with tawny markings; M-line not clearly delineated ( Figs G.1 View Plate I , G.2). Pronotum pale yellow, with a large dark central band flanked with a symmetrical darker design ( Figs G.1 View Plate I , G.2). Inner half of the two lower ocelli circled by a narrow black band (Fig. G.2).

Type material. Holotype male: SPAIN. Granada province , River Castril , Sierra de Castril, 1220 m, 37° 54’ 25.0560’’ N, 2° 44’ 51.4788’’ W, 16 Jun 2005, holotype, 1♂ (with penial armature detached), leg. J. M. Tierno de Figueroa & M. J. López-Rodríguez ( MZL) GoogleMaps . Paratypes: same location, 16 Jun 2005, 1♂ (with penial armature detached), ( MZL) GoogleMaps ; 1♀ ( MZL) GoogleMaps ; 14 Dec 2004, 1L ♂ ( MZL); leg. J. M. Tierno de Figueroa & M. J. López-Rodríguez. Additional material is listed in the Appendix 1, under type G.

Male adults. Sclerotized apex of aedeagus slightly enlarged medially in specimens with de vivo everted aedeagus ( Fig. G.4 View Plate III ) and with nearly parallel sides in dissect- ed specimens ( Figs. G.3 View Plate XV , G. 5 View Plate IX ), distally terminated by two triangle-shaped extensions ( Figs G.4 View Plate III , G. 5 View Plate IX , G.6), and with a brush-like apex ( Figs. G.3 View Plate XV , G. 5 View Plate IX ). Aedeagal tube cylindrical ( Fig G.4 View Plate III ). Mesal field on tergite IX distally with a very small medial incision (Figs G.6). Apex of hemitergal lobes of tergite X blunt, wide and short, apically enlarged, in lateral view ( Fig. G.7 View Plate VIII ). Aedeagal tube covered by a dense field of setae with alternating lengths and densities (Fig. G.8).

Morphological affinities. Adult males of Perla andalusiaca sp. n. are close to those of Perla pyrenaica sp. n. (type E) by the sclerotized apex of their aedeagus (cf. Figs. G.5 View Plate IX and E. 3 View Plate XV ). The distal side of the hemitergal lobes of tergite X is not enlarged apically in specimens of Perla andalusiaca sp. n. ( Fig. G.7 View Plate VIII ), whereas we find a ham- mer-like extension in specimens of Perla pyrenaica sp. n. (Fig. E.8).

Female adults. Subgenital plate with two distinct median triangular extensions (Fig. G.9).

Nymphs. Head mostly yellow, with narrow, darker coloured M-line ( Fig. G.10 View Plate II ). Pronotum with a large, dark, central band flanked by two dot-like dark patches loosely connected only to the upper edge of the pronotum ( Fig. G.10 View Plate II ). Rim of pronotum with a narrow, half-circled band ( Fig. G.10 View Plate II ). Lateral edges of pronotum yellow ( Fig. G.10 View Plate II ). Yellow markings on tergites III to V continuous, covering the entire distal edge of the corresponding segments ( Fig. G.11 View Plate XIV ). Tergites with long mediodorsal flexible setae, in lateral view ( Fig. G.12 View Plate XIV ). Dorsal faces of femora of middle and hind legs with a dark central oval mark ( Fig. G.13 View Plate IX ). Paraprocts with conical apex (Fig. G.14). Cerci with a sparse fringe of long, basal mediodorsal setae, not extending beyond segment XV (Figs. G.14, G.15).

Morphological affinities. Nymphs of Perla andalusiaca sp. n. are separable from those of Perla pyrenaica sp. n. (type E) by the presence of a sparse and short fringe of basal mediodorsal setae on the cerci of the former (Figs. G.14, G.15) and by a much longer fringe on the latter (Fig. E.14). The yellow markings on tergites III to V are continuous, and covering the entire distal edge of the corresponding segments in Perla andalusiaca sp. n. ( Fig. G.11 View Plate XIV ), whereas they are dot-like in Perla pyrenaica sp. n. ( Fig. E.12 View Plate XIV ).

Distribution. This species is presently known only from the Sierra de Castril and the Sierra Nevada, but is likely to have a wider distribution in Andalusia. The material is listed in the Appendix 1, under type G.

Derivation nominis. This species is named after the region which it inhabits. The adjective andalusiaca is to be treated as a feminine Latin adjective in the nominative case combined with Perla .

Note. Perla hagenii Pictet, 1865 , described after a single female from the outskirts of Granada (pp. 12–13; plate 2, Figs 1–3 View Plate I View Plate XV in Pictet 1865), could correspond to Perla andalusiaca sp. n., since the female subgenital plate and the markings on the head are similar to it ( Figs G.16 View Plate III , G.17). Perla hagenii has been later synonymized with P. marginata ( DeWalt et al. 2023) , referring to Illies (1966: 292), who in turn refers, erroneously, to Aubert (1956a). Aubert (1956a), indeed, considers Perla hagenii as a synonym of Perla maxima ( Perla grandis ), not P. marginata , as did also Navás (1901). Later, however, Aubert (1963) considered the species as a synonym of Perla marginata . To judge from Pictet’s (1865) illustrations ( Figs G.16 View Plate III , G.17), this taxon could, however, also correspond to Perla madritensis Rambur, 1842 . Since no holotype had been designated by Pictet (1865), and since his description is based on a single female specimen, it is safer to designate Perla hagenii as a nomen dubium, and not as a synonym of Perla marginata ( DeWalt et al. 2023) .

Specimens of the Perla bipunctata / grandis group are also mentioned from the Cantabrian Cordillera ( Vinçon & Pardo 2004; González del Tánago 1984) and Asturias. Navás (1917) had described a brachypterous species labelled Perla bicaudata L. ( maxima auct.) var. asturica from Río de Nueva, a low altitude river in Asturias, and indicates in his description “ Alae apicem abdominis haud attingentes ” (The wings not reaching the tip of the abdomen). This brachypterous species is presently ranked as a nomen dubium ( DeWalt et al. 2023), whereas Aubert (1952: 249) considered it as a valid species, endemic to the Cantabrian Cordillera, and Illies (1966: 293, 498) listed it as a synonym of Perla maxima ( Perla grandis or Perla bipunctata , uncertain synonymy, see above). By its brachypterism, this species corresponds to an extra-alpine taxon of the group, but is neither identical with brachypterous Perla carlukiana (type D) ( Navás 1917: 5 “ Similis var. carlukianae Klap. , obscurior ”), nor with macropterous Perla bipunctata as considered by Pictet, 1833 (type C). Brachypterous male nymphs probably belonging to this taxon have been collected by M. González del Tánago and D. García de Jalón (González del Tánago 1984) and Aubert (1956a: 255, under Perla maxima ) in the Cantabrian Cordillera. Since adults of this taxon were not available, and the type specimen being lost ( Aubert 1952: 249), the taxonomical status of Perla asturica Navás, 1917 cannot be ascertained at the time of writing. The putative nymphs of this morphospecies with brachypterous males are easily separable from those of all other known species, except specimens of type F (putative Perla bipunctata ) from the Pyrenees. We informally describe these nymphal specimens from the Cantabrian Cordillera, possibly identical with the Perla asturica of Navás (1917), and with the putative Perla bipunctata from the Pyrenees (type F) described by Despax (1942), under type H below.

MZL

Musee Zoologique

V

Royal British Columbia Museum - Herbarium

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Plecoptera

Family

Perlidae

Genus

Perla

Loc

Perla andalusiaca

Reding, Jean-Paul G. 2023
2023
Loc

Perla maxima

Aubert J. 1963: 79
Aubert J. 1956: 255
1956
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