Neoperla sjostedti, Klapalek, 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 : 167-169

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-4ACC-FF2C-FF4F-FB86FDF60FA8

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Neoperla sjostedti
status

 

79. Neoperla sjostedti View in CoL View at ENA cf. needhami

( Fig. 457 View FIGURES 450–457 )

Material studied. Republic of Cameroon, 8♀, 6°8’26.25’’N, 10°6’3-68’’ E, NW Reg., Bamenda, Mentchum River contributor 15 km NNW Bafut, 630m asl, 9 Nov.2011, MV-lamp ( NEOP325 , NEOP326 , NEOP327 , NEOP328 , NEOP329 , NEOP330 , NEOP331 , NEOP332 ; SMNS) . Republic of Kenya, 1♀: KENIA, Lake Turkana, Sibiloi National Park [3.92N, 36.18], Koobi Fora Base Camp 14.3.1988 ( HNHM, slide Z19.75) .

Habitus. WL 11.5–13.2mm. Pale, cerci yellow, apically gradually darkened.

Male. Unknown.

Female ( Fig. 457 View FIGURES 450–457 ). S8 with a short wide nail, the inner part with anterolateral crests is longer than the projecting part. Vagina unmodified, SSt coiled, about 2–3 rings with a complete brown stout scale band which is almost half as wide as the nail, only the terminal section is narrower.

Egg. Regularly ovoid, on average 338*178µm, anchor pole and operculum are of similar width. Numerous straight shallow striae, costae and sulci lie on almost the same level. Surface of costae smooth, the narrow sulci with two lines of micropunctures and elongate widenings for the micropyles. Operculum parabolic, with shallow cells. Collar with one ring of cells. Anchor mushroom-like, stem solid.

DNA ( Figs. 492 View FIGURE 492 , 498). A total of eight female specimens from Cameroon were sequenced for the COX1 DNA barcode fragment. Their sequences are identical and form a distinct cluster within the N. sjostedti needhami cluster, which is in line with these female specimens differing morphologically from typical N. sjostedti needhami . Describing this distinct population from Cameroon as a separate subspecies would require description of several other taxa to retain reciprocal monophyly of all taxa. As females of the named subspecies of S. sjostedti cannot be reliably distinguished, these specimens from Cameroon are explicitly characterised, but not formally described as a new subspecies.

Notes. The main morphological differences between the present females and other members of the sjostedticluster are the short, thick, and completely scaly SSt lacking bare basal regions, the anterolateral crests at the front of the nail, and the ovoid (as opposed to club-shaped) egg.

V.2. The Neoperla arambourgana -complex (= clade L)

This complex includes N. arambourgana , N. dundoana n. sp., and N. leroiana . Sternites of males are unmodified, the middle of T7 is slightly raised caudally, and the elevated part is slightly concave between low paramedian humps. T8 has a forward-curved process or a strong hook. Males also share an inconspicuous process between the lateral humps on T9; it is most distinct in N. arambourgana ( Fig. 459 View FIGURES 459–465 , black arrow). The straight tubular penis narrows distally a little, the tip is soft, often annulated and curved. The everted endophallus curves ventrad.

In most African Neoperla , spines on the basal section of endophallus are distributed dorsoventrally. In the present group the largest spines form two lateral rows near the base there are no other spines. Distally, smaller spines appear between the rows. Distally, all spines disappear but transparent membranes and a thin thread extend back to near the basal penis foramen. Details were not visible by transparency; the penes of a few specimens were therefore broken and the endophallus extracted ( Fig. 438 View FIGURES 432–438 ). The extracted middle portion of the endophallus resembles a very wide trachea. In several preparations the terminal structures appear to be somewhat inflated.

Caudal edge of female S8 variable, with a sclerotised nail or notch. Vagina unmodified, the SSt is a densely spinose slender tube of uniform width and moderate length, forming 1.5–~4 rings. The ovoid eggs have numerous straight or levogyrous striae, the bare costae are wider than the narrow sulci which are impunctate, except two rows of micropunctures.

The monophyly of the N. arambourgana -complex (= clade L) is maximally supported (100/100/100) by the

DNA sequence data analyses ( Figs. 491–492 View FIGURE 491 View FIGURE 492 , 497). Its sister group relation to the N. sjostedti -complex (clade K) is also maximally supported (100/100/100).

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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