Malenka murvoshi, Baumann & Kondratieff, 2010

Baumann, Richard W. & Kondratieff, Boris C., 2010, Malenka Murvoshi, A New Species Of Stonefly From The Spring Mountains Of Southern Nevada (Plecoptera: Nemouridae), Illiesia 6 (11), pp. 113-117 : 114-117

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.4759762

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4765909

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03CF87B3-FF89-FFF0-FECB-F91309995033

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Malenka murvoshi
status

sp. nov.

Malenka murvoshi View in CoL sp. n.

( Figs. 1-13 View Figs View Figs )

Malenka sp. A Sheldon 1979:289 .

Material examined. Holotype ♂, USA: Nevada: Clark County, Willow Creek, Willow Creek Campground , Spring Mountains , 3 April 1981, R.W. Baumann and S.M. Clark. Paratypes: Nevada. Clark Co. Cold Creek, Spring Mountains, northwest of Las Vegas , 15 Jan 1977, C.E. Hornig, 1♂, 1♀ ( BYUC) ; Cold Creek, Spring Range , 3 May 1977, A.L. Sheldon, 2♂ ( BYUC) ; Cold Creek, Spring Mountains , 8 Oct 1978, M.L. Boulton, 6♂, 14♀ ( BYUC) ; 17 Feb 1979, 1♂, 1♀ ( BYUC) ; Willow Creek, Spring Mountains , 10 Oct 1965, C.M. Murvosh, 3♂, 5♀ ( BYUC) ; Willow Creek, Spring Mountains , 23 Mar 1978, E. Schmid, 1♂ ( BYUC) ; Willow Creek, Willow Creek Campground, 3 April 1981, R. W. Baumann & S.M. Clark, 98♂, 42♀ ( BYUC, CSUC) ; Willow Spring, Willow Creek, Spring Mountains , 20 Dec 1995, R. W. Baumann & S.M. Clark, 3♂ ( BYUC) . Larvae : Nevada, Clark Co. Whisky Spring, 3 miles above Cold Creek, Bonanza Trailhead, Spring Mountains , 20 Dec 1995, R. W. Baumann, S.M. Clark, J.K. Gelhaus & C. R. Nelson, 2 larvae ( BYUC) ; Willow Creek, Willow Creek Campground, Spring Mountains , 3 Apr 1981, R. W. Baumann & S.M. Clark, 17 larvae ( BYUC, CSUC) . The holotype is deposited at the United States National Museum, Smithsonian Institution , Washington D.C.

Male. Macropterous. Body length 5.0-6.0 mm; forewing length 6.0-7.0 mm. General color brown, head, pronotum and anterior margin of mesonotum more darkly colored; pronotum covered with small rugosities that are darkly pigmented; antennae uniformly brown; legs light brown. Epiproct recurved over abdomen ( Figs. 1 View Figs , 6 View Figs ); dorsal aspect flattened, divided in anterior half by narrow median incision into paired lobes, which are tightly appressed, except at apex, which is deeply incised, forming large U-shaped notch terminally, which surrounds two, narrow upward directed apical hooks, terminal lateral margins expanded into large rounded lobes, which bear thin flattened scales ( Figs. 3 View Figs , 8, 9 View Figs ); lateral aspect curved upward between base and apex, ventral sclerite bare of spines, large apical flared lobes covered with plate-scales on dorsolateral margins ( Figs. 2 View Figs , 10 View Figs ). Paraprocts composed of three lobes, outer lobes short and blunt, extending to base of cerci, inner lobes short and slightly rounded at apex, with roughed surface. Median lobe large, curving upward around base of epiproct, base broad, apical aspect thin and scythe-shaped, with curved portion forming large sharply pointed apex, which curves outward toward the cerci, convex middle area bearing small, stout V-shaped outward directed spine, originating near the base of the curve ( Figs. 4 View Figs , 7, 11 View Figs ). Hypoproct broad at base underneath the vesicle, apical aspect greatly narrowed into thin pointed apex, fitting between the inner lobes of the paraprocts ( Fig. 7 View Figs ). Vesicle narrow and elongate, broadest medially and near apex, with thin base, vesicle surface covered with many rounded pit-like indentations, basal and lateral margins bearing thin hairs ( Figs. 7, 12 View Figs ). Cerci with mesobasal lobe, nipplelike and unsclerotized, with rounded tip directed inwardly towards the cerci, lobes and cerci covered with many stout hairs ( Figs. 1 View Figs , 6 View Figs ).

Female. Macropterous. Body length 7.0-8.0 mm, forewing length 7.0-8.0 mm. Color and general morphology similar to male. Seventh sternum produced medially into small stout nipple-like structure, medial portion of sternum swollen. Eighth sternum with median V-shaped notch, notch deep and extending to base of segment, lateral margins of segment bordering notch swollen ( Figs. 5 View Figs , 13 View Figs ). Swollen portions of sterna 7 and 8 are more visible in lateral aspect.

Larva. General morphology typical for the genus ( Baumann 1975, Stewart and Stark 2002): male body length 5.5-6.5 mm, female body length 7.0-8.0 mm. General color brown. Cervical gills present, two pairs located on each side of midline, gills found both inside and outside of lateral cervical sclerite, each set composed of 6-8 gills, usually with the actual number being 7 in undamaged specimens.

Etymology. We are pleased to name this species after our friend and colleague, the late Chad M. Murvosh, who collected the first specimens that are part of this study. Chad was a well known aquatic entomologist, with expertise in the water penny beetles or Psephenidae . He collected many interesting aquatic insects throughout western North America during his career at the University of Nevada at Las Vegas.

Diagnosis. Malenka murvoshi males can be separated most easily from its closest congeners, M. biloba (Claassen) and M. coloradensis (Banks) by the shape of the paraprocts. In M. biloba , the median lobe of the paraproct has a bilobed apex, the larger outer lobe is longer and cultriform, while the inner lobe is stout with a triangular apex. The median lobe in M. coloradensis has a nearly truncate apex, terminating in two short stout tips. Whereas, in M. murvoshi the apex of the median lobe is scythe-shaped with a large sharply pointed apex, but bears a short stout spine on its outer margin ( Figs. 4 View Figs , 11 View Figs ). All three of these species share the character of simple mesobasal cercal lobes which are nipple-like and not apically acute or darkly sclerotized ( Figs.1 View Figs , 6 View Figs ). Females cannot be separated without associated males by external characters. Nymphs may potentially be separable by the number of gill branches on each side of the cervical sclerite from sympatric species, but this character requires further study.

Remarks. The Spring Mountains of southern Nevada range northwest-southeast between Las Vegas and the California border and are isolated from the many north-south oriented ranges in the Great Basin portion of Nevada. The highest point is Mount Charleston, at 3,633m. Extensive collecting of the region indicates that M. murvoshi is apparently endemic to these mountains. Malenka coloradensis , however, was collected in Deer Creek only a short distance south of the known localities for M. murvoshi . It is interesting to note that the three Malenka species that were discussed in the diagnosis have the most southern distribution of the genus in their respective states in the United States and Mexico: M. biloba California and Baja California; M. coloradensis : Arizona, Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, South Dakota, Utah and Wyoming ( Stark et al. 2009); M. murvoshi only in southern Nevada.

R

Departamento de Geologia, Universidad de Chile

CSUC

California State University, Chico, Vertebrate Museum

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Plecoptera

Family

Nemouridae

Genus

Malenka

Loc

Malenka murvoshi

Baumann, Richard W. & Kondratieff, Boris C. 2010
2010
Loc

Malenka sp. A Sheldon 1979:289

Malenka sp. A Sheldon 1979:289
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