Neoperla vicina, Zwick & Zwick, 2023

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 : 125-127

publication ID

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

publication LSID

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

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8154259

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E12C876C-4A16-FFFA-FF4F-FA8BFECB0B48

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Neoperla vicina
status

sp. nov.

57. Neoperla vicina n. sp.

( Figs. 320–322 View FIGURES 313–322 , 330–331 View FIGURES 323–331 )

Type material: Democratic Republic of the Congo: ♀ holotype ( NEOP250 , CASENT 8413118 ) , 6♀ paratypes: Belg. Kongo, 39km S Walikale [-1.40, 28.00], 700m, 25.12.1957, Ross & Leech (Z19.29 NEOP249 , Z19.30 NEOP251 ,both CASENT 8413119; 1♀, same locality and date, slide Z.21.01 ( SMNS). 1 ♀ paratype, Kongo, Odzala Nat. Park [1.19°N, 14.85°E; 560m], 29.9.[1996]– 3.3.1997 leg. V.Sinaev ( MfNB). GoogleMaps

Additional material studied: 1♁ (presumed): Teleki-exp. 1988 8 No. 332 \ 180 km W from Bukavu [-2.49, 28.84], rainforest, 16.5.1988 (slide 19.74; HNHM, Budapest) .

Habitus. WL of male 10.7mm, of female 11.2–12.3 mm. Light yellowish brown, no pattern, possibly faded. Wings slightly turbid, yellowish, antenna entirely, cercus distally brownish. Narrow black ocellar rings, in several specimens a light brown spot between the ocelli. Legs of male darker, hind tibia widened.

Male ( Figs. 320–322 View FIGURES 313–322 : presumed). As for the complex. Middle of T7 caudally with a small dark plate-like area which appears caudally serrate because SB on its rear face are visible from above ( Fig. 320 View FIGURES 313–322 ). The small plate hardly projects. T8 with strongly raised conical process ( Fig. 321 View FIGURES 313–322 ). HT10 long, slender, slightly concave, tip blunt, a little downcurved, mediobasal callus tongue-shaped.

8 An informal designation of the Hungarian Scientific Africa Expedition 1988, made in memory of the expedition of count Samuel Teleki a hundred years earlier. Locality list in Vojnits (1990).

Penis tubular, soft, almost straight, undulating a little. Tube with a subterminal dorsal patch of low scales, tips point to penis base. Endophallus base straight, bare, curves ventrad only where the wide dense dorsal band of small conical spines begins and ends where the endophallus loop crosses the penis tube. Ventral spine band similar, shorter, a wide bare strip between bands. Terminal section of endophallus wide and bare ( Fig. 322 View FIGURES 313–322 ).

Female ( Fig. 330 View FIGURES 323–331 ). As for the complex. The caudal median sclerite on S8 is very small. Vagina unmodified, SSt about 1.5 rings long, the bare concave edge of the base is not very apparent. The completely scaly section thins distally, the scales form a gapless inner coat of the SSt.

Egg ( Fig. 331 View FIGURES 323–331 ). Elongate, 400*195─295µm, with about 16 straight striae beginning at some distance from the anchor pole (arrow in Fig. 331 View FIGURES 323–331 ) and ending before reaching the operculum. The egg is very slender, because of the strongly projecting costae the egg diameter in the striate section is larger than in the smooth sections. The collar is a low ring with projecting inner edge which constrains the opening of the funnel-shaped anchor cavity which has a pearly inner surface. The anchor is mushroom-shaped, with solid stem. Sulci with extremely fine and dense unordered punctation, micropyles are freely visible. All striae end at the same level at the operculum base but there is no mark or suture. The operculum is high and strongly raised, with nipple-like top, the punctation is dense, unordered, and even finer than in the sulci, no cells.

Variation. Contour of eggs varies, apparently with degree of hydration. The female from Odzala N.P. contained very few residual eggs which seemed to be smaller and less elongate than others.

DNA ( Figs. 491–492 View FIGURE 491 View FIGURE 492 , 497). The female holotype and two female paratypes from the D. R. Congo were sequenced with the genome-skimming approach, representing the limited geographic distribution of this species and providing very strong support (98.9/100/100) for the monophyly of this species. The species is very strongly supported (98/100/100) as sister to N. dubia Klapálek + N. proxima n. sp..

Notes. The presumed N. vicina n. sp. male resembles the other species in the complex. Tergites of Neoperla sp. Afr_A, originally the presumed male of N. muyukae , are also similar, but the penis and the female (if correctly associated) differ. Neoperla vicina n. sp. has almost as few egg striae as members of the N. transvaalensis-group .

Etymology. An adjective in female gender designating the species as neighbour (Lat. vicinus) of N. dubia and N. proxima n. sp.

SMNS

Staatliches Museum fuer Naturkund Stuttgart

HNHM

Hungarian Natural History Museum (Termeszettudomanyi Muzeum)

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Plecoptera

Family

Perlidae

Genus

Neoperla

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