Neoperla dolium, 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 : 150-153

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.8154277

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E12C876C-4AFF-FF1C-FF4F-F8B6FB690908

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Neoperla dolium
status

sp. nov.

72. Neoperla dolium n. sp.

( Figs. 407–417 View FIGURES 407–412 View FIGURES 413–417 )

Type material. Holotype ♀, 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 ( NEOP296 , body + slide), 1 paratype ♀ (slide and fragments of abdomen), 1 presumed ♁ (tip of abdomen in microvial, penis on slide, all A.Zwick & D.Bartsch, SMNS)). GoogleMaps

Additional paratypes: 1 ♀, mis-associated paralectotype of N. camerunensis (End.) : Ochthopetina camerunensis Enderl. Type ♀ [in Enderlein’s hand] det. Dr. Enderlein [print] \ Kamerun Barombi Conradt \ Co-Typus [print, yellow paper] \ Mus. Zool. Polonicum Warszawa 12/45 \ Mus. Zool. Polonicum Warszawa Typus n. 1297 Ochthopetina camerunensis Enderlein 1909 Paralectotypus [red label]; ( MIZ; pinned genitalia and egg slide on Zelluloid on the specimen pin; slide with eggs from same individual, made by P. Zwick in 1973, also in SMNS). 2♀ paratypes, Muyuka [4°43'18''N, 9°38'27''E; 305m], Victoria Div., Brit Cameroons,VI-25-49 B.Malkin at Light (in alcohol; MfNB).

Habitus. WL 9–13mm. General colour light ochre, wings slightly infuscate and turbid. Frontoclypeus in front of occipital suture with vague brownish tinge, occiput and a strip along inner edge of eye paler than rest. Ocellar spot sometimes with an anterior point. Thoracic nota with grey tinge. Antenna light, cercus dark, legs light ochre.

Male (presumed). T7 with a long and narrow pyramidal process. The median sclerite on T8 is wide in front and bears a narrow but strongly raised process near midlength. In dorsal view it is hidden under the process of T7, in side view the two processes almost meet, there is only a narrow gap between them ( Figs. 413, 414 View FIGURES 413–417 ). T9 with the usual lateral humps and median furrow, otherwise unmodified. Base of HT10 curved and with long pilosity, basomedial callus parabolic, the forward-directed tip of HT10 slender, concave in dorsal, straight in lateral view. Epiproct with sharp tip ( Figs. 413–417 View FIGURES 413–417 ).

The straight penis ( Figs. 415–417 View FIGURES 413–417 ) is slender, the apical dorsal swelling is large, beset with sharp spines pointing towards the base. A bare section ( Fig. 416 View FIGURES 413–417 , bs) separates the spines from numerous transverse scales on the wide endophallus base. The endophallus is about twice as long as the tube, its basal third with slender teeth. The non-everted distal part of the endophallus is well visible by transparency and the narrow recurrent inner tube which contains sharply pointed conical teeth, distally over a long stretch in two regular rows, can be followed to near the basal penis opening.

Female ( Fig. 407 View FIGURES 407–412 ). S8 pale, median area slightly sclerotised, antecosta concave in middle, caudal edge with a wide shallow notch. Vagina distinctly longer than S8, slender, waisted, supported by a vaginal sclerite. The SSt is a coil of about 1.5 rings, the base with only a few scales along the convex face is long, distally the entire diameter with dense cover of triangular scales.

Egg ( Figs. 408–412 View FIGURES 407–412 ). A stout drum, 330–340µm long, EL/EW 1.45 ( Fig. 408 View FIGURES 407–412 ). Collar sessile, wide, short, no cells. Some knobs and pearls along the inward-bent edge constrain the opening of the funnel-shaped anchor cavity ( Fig. 410 View FIGURES 407–412 ). Anchor mushroom-shaped, with a solid stem and a thin cap just covering the wide anchor pole. The operculum is a blunt cap with deep punctures ( Fig. 409 View FIGURES 407–412 ). The approximately 27 levogyrous striae have wide costae with a longitudinal fissure (black arrows in Fig. 411 View FIGURES 407–412 ), the narrow sulci with two regular rows of micropunctures are lower than the costae. The micropyles are roughly 1.7µm wide and stand between the two rows of micropunctures ( Fig. 412 View FIGURES 407–412 , white arrow) in a ring near the operculum. At the base of the operculum the egg contour is slightly angular, at this site wide low scales or knobs on the costae (black arrow in Fig. 412 View FIGURES 407–412 ) suggest an eclosion line.

DNA ( Figs. 492 View FIGURE 492 , 498). Only the female holotype from Cameroon was sequenced for the COX1 DNA barcode fragment. Its sister relationship to N. gibbosa n. sp. is very strongly supported (97.5/100/100) .

Notes. Association of genders is supported by common occurrence in the light trap sample at the Etambo River. Other species in the same sample were known in both genders ( N. nigricauda Klap. , N. africana Klap. , N. duodeviginti n. sp., and N. lujana Navás ) or belonged to a different taxonomic group (1♁ N. erinaceus n. sp.). At Muyuka, female N. dolium n. sp. co-occurred with ♀♀ of N. spironema n. sp., with the ♀ type of N. muyukae n. sp., and the ♁ N. sp. Afr_A.

Etymology. The name is a noun in apposition describing the egg: Lat. dolium , a drum or barrel.

SMNS

Staatliches Museum fuer Naturkund Stuttgart

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Plecoptera

Family

Perlidae

Genus

Neoperla

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