Neoperla nigricauda Klapálek, 1909

Zwick, Peter & Zwick, Andreas, 2023, Revision of the African Neoperla Needham, 1905 (Plecoptera: Perlidae: Perlinae) based on morphological and molecular data, Zootaxa 5316 (1), pp. 1-194 : 101-103

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5316.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:BC922E16-2614-4F3D-AD82-87A845DE7E2B

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E12C876C-4A0E-FFE2-FF4F-F98EFE500A98

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Neoperla nigricauda Klapálek, 1909
status

 

44. Neoperla nigricauda Klapálek, 1909 View in CoL

( Figs. 231–237 View FIGURES 231–237 )

Neoperla nigricauda Klapálek, 1909: 228 View in CoL .

Type material. Republic of Cameroon, Lectotype ♁ (here designated): N. Kamerun, Johann-Albrechtshöhe L.Conradt S. ii/5.96 \ nigricauda Klapálek \ Typus ( NMCZ, Abdomen and penis in microvial on pin). For a misassociated paralectotype see under N. conradti .

Additional material. Republic of Cameroon : 8♁, 4♀ ( NEOP182 , NEOP183 , NEOP184 , NEOP185 , NEOP186 , NEOP187 , NEOP188 ) : 4°51’42.89’’N, 9°38’21.17’’ E, Republic of Cameroon , SW Region , Tumbel , Ngusi, Etambo River, 490m asl, 23.Oct.2011, MV-lamp, A. Zwick; 2♀ ( NEOP181 , NEOP189 ) GoogleMaps : 6°8’26.25’’N, 10°6’3- 68’’E, Cameroon , NW Reg., Bamenda, Mentchum River contributor 15 km NNW Bafut, 630m asl, 9 Nov.2011, MV-lamp, A. Zwick (coll. SMNS) . 1♁, Kumba , Cameroon, light trap, early Dec.1952, lg. Nicholas (Z16/170; gift H.B.N.Hynes). 1♁: Kamerun Ekona 17.4.-20.5.38 Buhr S. G. ( MfNB) . 1♀, CAMEROUN: 28 mi. S. Ngaoundéré, 1250m, 1-X-1966, E.S.Ross & K. Lorenzen. ( NEOP180 ) , CASENT 8413107, slide CAS.001; some eggs on slide Z17.55, in SMNS). Republic of Kenya : 1♁, Lake Turkana , Sibiloi National Park [3.92N, 36.18], Koobi Fora Base Camp 14.3.1988 (Slide Z 19/77; HNHM) .

Habitus ( Fig. 231 View FIGURES 231–237 ): WL 10.3–11.5mm (male), 10.5–14.9mm (female). Specimens from Etambo and Mentchum rivers with dark grey to black wings, pronotum dark greyish brown; a dark arch along occipital suture and across ocelli. Antenna and maxillary palpus brown. Cercus black. Tip of femur and base of tibia black, in sharp contrast with the yellow distal parts. The length of dark sections decreases from front to hind leg. Some other individuals are pale, perhaps faded.

Male ( Figs. 232–235 View FIGURES 231–237 ). Hind tibiae widened. A bilobed sclerite in the intersegmental fold T7/T8 forms a hinge similar to Fig. 113. T View FIGURES 108–113 7 View FIGURES 6–10 process long, conical, opposite a hump on T8 ( Fig. 233 View FIGURES 231–237 ). Caudally from the hump the T8- sclerite is band-shaped and flat. T9 unmodified. Basomedial callus of HT10 parabolic. The HT10 process curves outward, the wide spatulate tips rest between the pilose lateral humps of T9 ( Fig. 232 View FIGURES 231–237 ).

Penis ( Figs. 234–235 View FIGURES 231–237 ) 1.50–1.60 mm long, diameter 0.12–0.16 mm. Straight, penis tip dorsally membranous, ventrally with a low terminal swelling. Endophallus about as long as the penis, carrot-shaped, with 2 dorsolateral rows of 8–10 slender spines on the base which tapers rapidly to a narrow tube with 2 regular rows of small teeth ( Fig. 235 View FIGURES 231–237 ).

Female ( Fig. 236 View FIGURES 231–237 ). S8 with a large anteriorly rounded and medially incised brown macula which is caudally divided by a transverse pale angle. Vagina unmodified except anterolateral cornes rough, with spinules (arrow in Fig. 236 View FIGURES 231–237 ). SSt coiled and narrow, 3–4 times as long as S8, forming ca 3 rings, completely coated with scales, except the short base.

Egg ( Fig. 237 View FIGURES 231–237 ). Ovoid, size 340–375 * 195–220µm. More than 20 straight striae are present. Costae wide, flat, impunctate, sulci very narrow, slightly expanded around micropyles, the fine punctures are in no order. Striae become narrow before reaching the parabolic punctate operculum which has no cells. Anchor pole flat to gently convex, 75–90µm wide, with fine marginal rim instead of a collar. Anchor large, mushroom-shaped, often forming a cupule over the anchor pole to which it is attached on a low button. Details vary, see below.

DNA ( Figs. 491–492 View FIGURE 491 View FIGURE 492 , 496 View FIGURE 496 ). A total of 10 specimens from Cameroon were sequenced for the COX1 DNA barcode fragment and with the genome-skimming approach, representing the core geographic distribution of this species and providing maximum support (100/100/100) for the monophyly of the species. The species is very strongly supported (89/97/96) as sister to a group that comprises N. bella n. sp., N. bipolaris n. sp., and N. schuelei n. sp.. Both sexes are well represented.

Notes and variation. Black cerci and other details of pigmentation were the presumed specific characters in Klapálek’s key (1909) to African Neoperla species. However, very dark to black cerci occur also in other species (e.g., N. schuelei n. sp. and N. conradti (Enderlein) : see the latter species for a misassociated paralectotype of N. nigricauda ). On the other hand, several pale (variation or faded?) males from localities far from each other are in fact N. nigricauda according to their genitalia.

The female from Ngaoundéré and those from the Etambo and Mentchum rivers are N. nigricauda by DNA but egg sulci have two lines of micropunctures and the anchor pole has no button; instead the large anchor is inserted in a navel-like impression.

SMNS

Staatliches Museum fuer Naturkund Stuttgart

CAS

California Academy of Sciences

HNHM

Hungarian Natural History Museum (Termeszettudomanyi Muzeum)

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Plecoptera

Family

Perlidae

Genus

Neoperla

Loc

Neoperla nigricauda Klapálek, 1909

Zwick, Peter & Zwick, Andreas 2023
2023
Loc

Neoperla nigricauda Klapálek, 1909: 228

Klapalek, F. 1909: 228
1909
Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF