Cnemidolestodea Handlirsch, 1937

Nel, Andre & Poschmann, Markus J., 2021, A new representative of the “ orthopteroid ” insect family Cnemidolestidae from the lower Permian of Germany, Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 66 (3), pp. 641-646 : 642

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.4202/app.00879.2021

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/5361D772-8F1A-1339-D367-FEAFFC73CC79

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Cnemidolestodea Handlirsch, 1937
status

 

Order Cnemidolestodea Handlirsch, 1937 View in CoL Family Cnemidolestidae Handlirsch, 1906 Genus Palatinarkema nov.

ZooBank LSID: urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:66B028D6-D771-47A1-95DC-873DDDBDD7E3

Etymology: From Latin palatium, origin of Palatinate, the type region, and the genus name Narkema .

Type species: Palatinarkema prokopi sp. nov., by monotypy; see below.

Diagnosis.—Forewing characters only. Posterior branch of MP+CuA+CuPa anteriorly pectinate, with small bifurcations on only two branches; stem of anterior branch of MP+CuA+CuPa very short; veinlet ma-mp very strong and not aligned with anterior branch of MP+CuA+CuPa; angle between anterior branch and posterior branch of MP+CuA+CuPa very acute; no well-defined vein in area between MA, MP+CuA+CuPa, ma-mp crossvein present; branches of anterior branch of MP+CuA+CuPa and of RP simple.

Palatinarkema prokopi sp. nov.

Fig. 1.

ZooBank LSID: urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:D32AD59D-F659-4837-83C8-0896E4CCFC45

Etymology: Named after our friend Jakub Prokop, specialist in fossil insects.

Holotype: PE 2020/5004-LS a, b, part and counterpart of a complete wing with parts of the basal region hidden by remains of an undetermined insect wing and/or a mineral stain.

Type locality: East of the village of Niedermoschel, Saar-Nahe Basin, Germany.

Type horizon: Niedermoschel black shale, Jeckenbach Subformation, Meisenheim Formation, Lower Rotliegend, lower Permian (sensu Schindler 1997), probably Asselian–?Sakmarian ( Schneider and Werneburg 2012; Schneider et al. 2020).

Material.— Holotype only.

Diagnosis.—As for the genus; two parallel darkened bands in distal half of forewing plus some spots in mid part.

Description.—Based on forewing venation: estimated total wing length about 17.1 mm, maximum width at midwing 4.4 mm; wing membrane probably originally hyaline with oblique colored bands; concave ScP slightly curved, running parallel with costal margin, merging with RA at distal two-thirds of wing; costal and subcostal areas nearly as broad where preserved; stem of R diverging from M+CuA near base of wing; division of RA and RP proximal of midwing, 2.3 mm basal to connection of ScP with RA; strongly convex ScP+RA simple ending on costal margin basal of wing apex; numerous oblique crossveins present between RA and costal wing margin; concave RP mostly posteriorly pectinate ending with six simple branches terminating at the wing tip; neutral (neither really convex not concave) vein MA diverging from M+CuA and running parallel to stem of R/RP; MA deeply forked into two simple branches, anterior one MA1 shortly connected to RP and posterior one MA2 nearly straight; CuPa not visible at base, hidden by debris; stem of MP+CuA+CuPa elongate, 1.7 mm long, bifurcating into two branches, the posterior branch subdivided into four branches; and an anterior branch with a short stem and bifurcating into two elongate branches, defining a long but rather narrow area between it, MA and crossvein ma-mp, without well-defined and strong vein inside it; angle between anterior and posterior branches of MP+CuA+CuPa very acute, ca. 18°; both branches of anterior branch of MP+CuA+CuP simple; crossvein ma-mp between MA and anterior branch of MP+CuA+CuPa very strong, apparently convex, and not aligned with anterior branch of MP+CuA+CuPa; area between branches of RP, concave CuP basally dividing into CuPa and CuPb, CuPb running parallel to MP+CuA+CuPa towards posterior wing margin; anal area incomplete with partly preserved first and second anal veins running parallel to CuP and CuPb.

Stratigraphic and geographic range.— Type locality and horizon only.

Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF