Neoperla sambarua, 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 : 115-116

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-4A18-FFF7-FF4F-FBFEFD8C0A98

treatment provided by

Plazi (2023-07-17 08:15:58, last updated 2023-12-06 01:52:19)

scientific name

Neoperla sambarua
status

sp. nov.

51. Neoperla sambarua n. sp.

( Figs. 285–288 View FIGURES 278–288 , 292–293 View FIGURES 289–293 )

Types and additional material taken with them: United Republic of Tanzania: Tanga region W. Usambara Mts., Mazumbai, ZMB’s Tanzania Exp, (after Andersen & Johansen 1992): Kaputu stream on Kwagoroto Hill, from 1770m down to 1400m (see Notes under N. usambara !): Site A: holotype ♁, 1♀, 4.– 9.11.1990; 1♀, 4.– 13.12.1990; 2♁ paratypes, 5♀, 9.– 13.1.1991; 2♁ paratypes, 2♀, 4.– 12.2.1991. 2♁, 3♀ paratypes, 1♀: Site below/beyond waterfall, 6.– 12.11.1990. Sites H, M, N, O: 1♀ paratype, 1♁, 7♀, November 1990. 1♀ paratype, Dar es Salaam [-6.8393, 39.3103; red ink] \ det. P. Zwick 1980 Neoperla spec . 37 [handwritten on photoprint]. In coll. Klapálek, NMCZ, under a N. sjostedti -label; pinned slide with genitalia & eggs. A slide with a single egg in SMNS.

Additional material studied: 1♀: Tanganyika Terr.: Bunduki [-7.0377, 37.6341], Uluguru Mts., [illegible] Mgeta, 1300m, 30.4.– 11.5.1957, Leleup & Basilewsky ( MRAC) GoogleMaps .

Holotype in ZMBN, paratypes and additional material in ZMBN, SMNS, and as indicated.

Habitus. Same as N. usambara n. sp. WL of males 11.7–12.8mm, of females 13.2–14.7mm.

Male ( Figs. 285–288 View FIGURES 278–288 ). T7 with a slender triangular process projecting far over T8 ( Figs. 285–286 View FIGURES 278–288 ). A weakly sclerotised Y-shaped sclerite on T8 is raised like a cushion, with some SB near midlength, caudally bare. T9 is unmodified, HT10 is straight, slender and longer than in A. usambara n. sp., the mediobasal callus is rounded, tongue-shaped.

The penis ( Figs. 287–288 View FIGURES 278–288 ) is a tube with slightly flattened and widened, sub-parallel distal portion. The wide section has spinose projections at base and tip. The sausage-like base of the endophallus is about half as wide as the penis tube, distally the endophallus is long and winding. The delicate needle-like spines were observed by transparency and are hardly as large as the external spines on the penis apex. The recurrent tube is thin, details were not recognised, its length is as in N. usambara n. sp..

Female ( Fig. 292 View FIGURES 289–293 ). S8 is slightly sclerotised, with an indistinct transverse pale zone near midlength. The caudal part of segment and a terminal lappet are most strongly pigmented. The caudal sternite edge is sometimes sinuous because the median lappet is flanked by shallow notches. The inner genitalia are same as in N. usambara n. sp..

Egg ( Fig. 293 View FIGURES 289–293 ). Size 381*276µm, balloon-shaped, the smooth surface is finely punctate, there are no striae. Unmodified micropyles stand in a loose ring at approximately 70% egg length. Operculum broadly rounded, the contracted collar projects, it has no cells. The anchor cavity is shallow, the anchor is mushroom-shaped.

DNA. No data.

Notes. The female from Daressalam was not mentioned in any of Klapálek’s papers but stood in his collection as the doubtful N. sjostedti . However, that species is very different from N. sambarua n. sp.. Neoperla sambarua n. sp. and N. usambara n. sp. are very similar in many respects and probably closely related, despite having different eggs.

Etymology. An anagram of Usambara, a noun in apposition, referring to the species’ range.

IV.4 The Neoperla orthonema -complex (= clade H)

The N. orthonema -complex is proposed for three West African species whose ovoid eggs at first glance seem to have a mushroom-shaped anchor. However, the delicate cap rests on several filaments which rise directly from the anchor cavity and form a curled bundle under the cap. When the anchor attaches to some substrate the filaments stretch out and turn into long threads, the cap is then no longer visible ( Fig. 302 View FIGURES 294–304 ).

Egg striae differ between the species, those of N. filamentosa n. sp. are levogyrous and resemble the N. sjostedti - and N. arambourgana complex with extremely narrow sulci with a row of micropunctures on each side ( Fig. 307 View FIGURES 305–308 ). In N. orthonema n. sp. and N. spironema n. sp. eggs have no typical sulci but two kinds of raised ridges, with the micropyles on top of the lower ridges ( Fig. 312 View FIGURES 309–312 ). Both of these characters are unique in Neoperla .

Female S8 have a large brown spot enclosing a pale anchor pattern (e.g., Fig. 301 View FIGURES 294–304 ). The slightly sclerotised caudal segment edge has a shallow bare notch ( Fig. 305 View FIGURES 305–308 ). The vagina has spines next to the attachment of the SSt which forms 2–3 rings with a dense coat of triangular scales, and the floor of the vagina is roughened by microscopic spinules. We cannot distinguish females without eggs, the eggs differ between species. The>20 to approximately 30 striae are straight in N. orthonema n. sp. but are levogyrous spirals in N. filamentosa n. sp. and N. spironema n. sp..

DNA ( Figs 491–492 View FIGURE 491 View FIGURE 492 , 496 View FIGURE 496 ). The N. orthonema -complex (= clade H) is maximally supported and genetically very distinct as indicated by the length of its branch. It is very strongly supported (92.3/100/100) as sister to N. benti n. sp., and together they are strongly supported (65.7/100/90) as sister to the extensive N. spio -complex (~ clade G). The morphology-based concept of the N. orthonema -complex (= clade H) renders the extensive N. burgeoni - complex (~ clade G) paraphyletic but including N. benti sp. n. in the N. orthonema -complex would result in two reciprocally monophyletic complexes.

Notes. The only known male in the N. orthonema -complex fits perfectly in the N. spio -group and is easily identified. In contrast, females had to be included in several keys and can only be identified by details of egg structure which are difficult to see.

Zwick, P. (1980) Plecoptera (Steinfliegen). In: Handbuch der Zoologie. 4 (2). 2 / 7. W. de Gruyter, Berlin, 115 pp.

Gallery Image

FIGURE 491. Codon-model maximum likelihood phylogram based on 83 largely complete mitochondrial genome sequences only (mt-NT). Statistical support values (SH-aLRT, UFBoot) from this and other analyses summarised by squares as explained in the figure. Terminal labels include information on the species, type status, gender, originating country, unique sequence identifier (NEOP###), sequencing approach and total basepairs of 13 mitochondrial, protein-coding genes. Clades of particular interest highlighted with colours that correspond to the clades in other trees. HT = holotype; PT = paratype; PCR = Polymerase Chaine Reaction; WGS = Whole Genome Shotgun.

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FIGURE 492. Simplified overview of codon-model maximum likelihood phylogram based on 356 mitochondrial genome and COX1 DNA barcode sequences (all-NT). Terminal labels include information on the species only. Clades of particular interest highlighted with colours that correspond to the clades in other trees. The full tree is shown in Figs 493-498.

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FIGURE 496. Partial (clades G, H) codon-model maximum likelihood phylogram based on 356 mitochondrial genome and COX1 DNA barcode sequences (all-NT). See Fig. 493 for common details.

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FIGURES 278–288. Neoperla usambara n. sp. and N. sambarua n. sp., ♁ holotypes: N. usambara: 278, 279, abdominal tip, dorsal and lateral views; 280–283, naturally fully everted penis, photograph of the holotype whole mount with enlarged details, corresponding structures are connected by lines; 284, connection of penis base to the mesodermal ejaculatory duct (ed) via the thin recurrent tube (rt). N. sambarua: 285, 286, abdominal tip, dorsal and lateral views 287, penis, beginning eversion of endophallus; 288, enlarged apex of same. ed, ejaculatory duct; rt, recurrent tube; tergites and HT10 are labeled.

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FIGURES 289–293. Neoperla usambara n. sp. and N. sambarua n. sp., ♀ ♀. N. usambara: 289, genital situs, vagina and the coiled spermathecal stalk flipped back to expose anchor pattern on S8; 290, egg; 291, detail of striae with a micropyle in a sulcus (full arrow). N. sambarua: 292, genital situs with diagrammatic indication of border between S7/S8; 293, egg, variable thickness of chorion indicated by inner contour on right hand side. Open arrows show divergent spinule bands at entry of SSt into vagina. Scales as indicated. A, anchor; c, collar; co, costa; ls, lateral sclerite; mi, micropyle; mic, micropylar canal; sa, spermatheca; SSt, spermathecal stalk.

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FIGURES 294–304. Neoperla orthonema n. sp.: Male paratype from Lakota, Ivory Coast: 294, 295, abdominal tip; 296, everted penis, with detail from middle of endophallus; 297–299, apex of contracted penis, in dorsal, ventral and lateral views (from left); 300, lateral view of penis apex, beginning eversion (♁ from Kousankoro); 301, female genital situs (vagina flipped back to show the anchor pattern on S8) and 302, egg, Ankasa game prod. res., Ghana; 303, view onto edge of chorion fragment showing variable size of costae (Ivory Coast, Lakota); 304, detail of collar with end of striae (Wli Falls, Ghana). Scales are 100µm. Tergites, sternites and hemitergite 10 are labeled. d, dorsal spines; eb, spines at base of endophallus; sa, spermatheca; SSt, spermathecal stalk; V, vagina; vs, ventral spines.

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FIGURES 305–308. Neoperla filamentosa, n. sp., holotype. 305, genital situs; 306, egg of HT; 307, detail of striae, arrows indicate micropyles. 308, egg of doubtful ♀ from Touba, Senegal. Scales are 100µm, eggs to same, details not to scale. Sa, spermatheca; SSt, spermathecal stalk; V, vagina.

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FIGURES 309–312. Neoperla spironema n. sp.: 309, 310, holotype; 311, a paratype; both from Ankasa Game. Res; 312, SEMdetail of chorion with the 2 kinds of costae and a micropyle (Ivory Coast, USNM; from Moore, 1991). Scales are 100µm, or as indicated. mi, micropyle; sa, spermatheca; SSt, spermathecal stalk; V, vagina.

SMNS

Staatliches Museum fuer Naturkund Stuttgart

MRAC

Musée Royal de l’Afrique Centrale

ZMBN

Museum of Zoology at the University of Bergen, Invertebrate Collection

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Plecoptera

Family

Perlidae

Genus

Neoperla