Perla pallida Guérin-Méneville, 1843

Teslenko, Valentina A., Palatov, Dmitry M. & Semenchenko, Alexander A., 2024, Overview of the Caucasian Perla Geoffroy, 1762 (Plecoptera: Perlidae) based on morphological and molecular data with description of two new species, Zootaxa 5507 (1), pp. 1-56 : 31-38

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5507.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:065ECECA-5F0B-47BE-82FC-6C1F68B316FD

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13751048

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03F4BB77-FFEE-CE22-FF03-94D2DB51F929

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Perla pallida Guérin-Méneville, 1843
status

 

Perla pallida Guérin-Méneville, 1843 View in CoL

Figs. 102‒127 View FIGURES 102‒107 View FIGURES 108‒111 View FIGURES 112‒119 View FIGURES 120‒121 View FIGURES 122‒127

Guérin-Méneville, 1843: 393−394;

Pictet, 1841: 192, pl. XIII, fig. 13;

Klapálek, 1923: 46−48, fig. 22;

Zhiltzova, 1956: p. 660 (distribution in the Kura R. Basin, Trialetsky Range);

Sivec & Stark, 2002: 23, figs. 43−45,“ Type 1”;

Murányi et al., 2021: 73 (distribution, Azerbaijan)

Perla pallida View in CoL was originally described by Guérin-Méneville (1843) based on a male from the Caucasus without indicating the type locality. The original description was supplemented by Pictet (1841). Later, the species was redescribed by Klapálek (1923) on Caucasian specimens from Azerbaijan, Georgia, and Turkey. These specimens subsequently became neotypes and are stored in the Natural History Museum of Wien (NHMW) ( Murányi et al. 2021). The primary types were presumably lost during the 19th century. The current concept of the species is based on these Caucasian specimens ( Sivec & Stark 2002). Taking into account differences in egg structure, Sivec & Stark (2002) considered P. pallida View in CoL to be a species complex of three or more species or subspecies distributed in the Caucasus, Anatolia, Balkans, and Carpathians.

Diagnosis. Mesal field on tergum 9 of male slightly expanded anteriorly and posteriorly, width slightly greater than length; longitudinal serrated ridges (10−12) closer to anterior and lateral margins; posterior margin avoids serrated ridge rows ( Figs. 106 View FIGURES 102‒107 , 108 View FIGURES 108‒111 ). Hemitergites are strong, narrowed towards the rounded apex, and hook wide at the base with a weak notch distally ( Figs. 104, 106 View FIGURES 102‒107 , 108 View FIGURES 108‒111 ). The tube of the penis is 1.6 times the length of the sac and has a constriction before the sac; the sac is large, wider than the tube, and covered with a patch of coarse triangular spines, forming a wide, loose triangular apical brush; the spines of the brush along the lateral edges of the sac are absent; ventrally, the brush end is triangular; dorsally, the edge of the apical brush is semi-rounded ( Figs. 108−111 View FIGURES 108‒111 ). Egg oval; collar with flanged rim that is incised and distinctly wider than the neck; the collar sides covered ribs; chorion smooth, covered with follicle hexagonal cell impressions, limiting at the corners by six tiny round punctuations and by six small, slit-shaped punctuations located between them; cells have boundaries, a central depression, and one pore on the floor; pore and hexagonal punctuation are different in size ( Figs. 112‒119 View FIGURES 112‒119 ). The micropylar orifices lack rims ( Figs. 117−118 View FIGURES 112‒119 ). Head of larvae with a large trapezoidal pale spot expanding from the anterior ocellus to the labrum base; the lateral edges of the spot with two pair pointed projections; paired projections near the labrum wide; a thin pale M-line delimiting the spot from below; the epicranial sutures brown ( Figs. 120−121 View FIGURES 120‒121 ). Anal gills are absent.

Complimentary description. The coloration, external structures of the male and female genitalia, eggs, and appearance of larva in our material generally correspond to existing descriptions of P. pallida ( Guérin-Méneville 1843; Pictet 1841; Klapálek 1923; Sivec & Stark 2002; Zhiltzova & Cherchesova 2003), although the resemblance with Carpathian populations is also noticeable ( Kis 1974, Teslenko & Zhiltzova 2009, their figs. 314–318), with the exception of the distinctive features of the penis described below.

Adult habitus. The main body color is yellow-brown ( Fig. 102 View FIGURES 102‒107 ). The head is mostly yellow; the M-line is yellow and moderately defined ( Figs. 102, 105 View FIGURES 102‒107 ). The interocellar area bears a dark brown spot reaching the M-line and directed to compound eyes above yellow posterior tentorial pits; the posterior edge between the lateral ocelli with a solid pale line ( Figs. 105 View FIGURES 102‒107 ). The female head is darker due to a larger dark brown spot in the interocellar area, with more distinct lateral edges approaching the M-line and the posterior tentorial pits closely but not going beyond them ( Fig. 105 View FIGURES 102‒107 ). A triangular light brown spot, widening towards the anterior margin of the clypeus, is in front of the M-line and anterior ocellus; the antenna is brown ( Figs. 102–103, 105 View FIGURES 102‒107 ). Occiput bears a wide, V-shaped brown spot in the area of the epicranial suture and stem, the spot is darker and more pronounced on females ( Figs. 103, 105 View FIGURES 102‒107 ).

Pronotum is trapezoidal, narrowed, and rounded posteriorly ( Figs. 102‒103, 105 View FIGURES 102‒107 ). The anterior and posterior margins arched, the lateral margins straight, the anterior corners almost straight; yellow, with a narrow dark brown stripe along the anterior and posterior margins; the lateral margins with a relatively wide dark sinuous band sometimes the lateral edges bent down, and the dark band is not visible dorsally ( Figs. 102‒103, 105 View FIGURES 102‒107 ). The medial pronotal band is brown and relatively narrow, widening more anteriorly than posteriorly; lateral pronotal fields have dark, rounded, patches on which light rugosities are visible ( Figs. 103, 105 View FIGURES 102‒107 ). Legs yellow; femur with a narrow longitudinal grayish band close to the outer edge and a narrow dark brown band distally; tibia with a short, narrow transverse brownish band in the basal third; tarsi brown apically ( Fig. 102 View FIGURES 102‒107 ). The cerci are long, projecting far beyond the end of the wings; they are bicolored, with each segment yellowish at the base and brown distally. The wings are yellow with dark brown veins ( Fig. 102 View FIGURES 102‒107 ).

Male. Tergum 8 medially with a membranous furrow narrowed posteriorly; posterolateral humps and posterior tergal margins covered with dense, relatively long setae ( Fig. 106 View FIGURES 102‒107 ). Tergum 9 with a sclerotized mesal field; width is slightly greater than length; slightly expanded anteriorly and posteriorly; posterior margin with a small membranous notch in the middle ( Figs. 106 View FIGURES 102‒107 , 108 View FIGURES 108‒111 ). Longitudinal serrated ridges (10−12) cover the mesal field closer to the anterior and lateral margins; the posterior margin avoids serrated ridge rows ( Figs. 106 View FIGURES 102‒107 , 108 View FIGURES 108‒111 ). Hemitergites are strong and slightly narrowed towards the rounded apex ( Figs. 104, 106 View FIGURES 102‒107 , 108 View FIGURES 108‒111 ). In dorsal view, the hemitergal hook (not cleared) is wide at the base, with a weak notch on the inner edge in the distal 1/3 ( Fig. 104 View FIGURES 102‒107 ); the top of the hook and inner edge are covered with sensilla basiconica ( Figs. 104, 106 View FIGURES 102‒107 , 108 View FIGURES 108‒111 ). The artificially everted penis carries a tube that is 1.6 times the length of the sac, a tube with a noticeable constriction in the distal third before the sac, covered dorsally with densely arranged longitudinal rows of serrate sclerites, changing into scales with small spines or without them ( Figs. 108‒111 View FIGURES 108‒111 ). The base of the tube is membranous, with paired patches of round spine bases laterally ( Figs. 110– 111 View FIGURES 108‒111 ). Ventrally, the tube is partly membranous and covered with rows of oval-elongated or polygonal sclerites with or without small spines, the same as on the dorsal surface ( Figs. 111 View FIGURES 108‒111 , A−C). The membranous sac is spherical and large; the sac width exceeds the tube width by 1/3; in dorsal view, the sac bears two rounded lobes at the base and a central tongue-shaped lobe narrowed to the sac base; ventrally, the sac bears two rounded lobes ( Figs. 108‒111 View FIGURES 108‒111 ). The apex of the sac is covered with a patch of rather coarse triangular brown spines, forming a relatively wide, loose apical brush, reaching almost to the middle of the tongue-shaped lobe ( Figs. 108, 110‒111 View FIGURES 108‒111 , D); there are no spines along the lateral edges of the sac. Ventrally, the apical brush ends with a triangular protrusion; dorsally, the edge of the brush is semi-rounded ( Figs. 108, 110–111 View FIGURES 108‒111 ). The configuration of the apical brush of the penis in the Caucasian population differs from the pattern of P. pallida from the Romanian Carpathians ( Kis 1974, Teslenko & Zhiltzova 2009, their fig. 317), which is wide and covers the sac completely.

Female. The subgenital plate is typical of several Perla species, occupying>1/2 of sternum 8 width and has a small bilobed projection posteromedially. The lobes are small, pointed, and covered with reddish setae; the lateral edges of the lobes are slightly beveled; and the lobes slightly protrude beyond the anterior margin of the sternum 9 ( Fig. 107 View FIGURES 102‒107 ).

Egg. Oval of medium size, with mean dimensions of 452×300 μm (n=8) ( Fig. 111 View FIGURES 108‒111 ). The anchor plate is mushroom-shaped and covered with globular bodies gathered in small groups ( Figs. 113, 116 View FIGURES 112‒119 ). The collar has a flanged rim, which is incised and distinctly wider than the neck ( Figs. 114‒116 View FIGURES 112‒119 ). The sides of the collar have prominent, continuous ribs extending from the shoulders to the rim ( Figs. 114, 116 View FIGURES 112‒119 ). The chorion surface is smooth and pitted; the chorion is covered throughout with follicle hexagonal cell impressions, limiting at the corners by six tiny round punctuations and six small, slit-shaped punctuations located between them; cells are separated from adjacent ones by expressed boundaries; the cell floor has one pore, and the pore and hexagonal punctuations are different in size ( Figs. 118‒119 View FIGURES 112‒119 ). A central depression in the cell flow is well pronounced in eggs from the Armenian population ( Figs. 113, 116‒117 View FIGURES 112‒119 ). The ring of micropyles is located ca. 1/3 of the egg length removed from the anterior pole, the micropylar orifices without rims ( Figs. 112–113, 117‒118 View FIGURES 112‒119 ).

Larva. The appearance of the larva agrees well with the description by Zhiltzova & Cherchesova (2003). The body is brown with contrasting pale patterning, covered with short dark clothing hairs, and has a dorsomesal band of erect silky white setae that is more pronounced on the last abdominal terga ( Figs. 120–121 View FIGURES 120‒121 ). The head is brown, bearing a large trapezoidal pale spot expanding from the anterior ocellus to the labrum base; the lateral edges of the spot with two pair pointed projections; paired projections near the labrum are wide; a thin pale M-line medially delimiting the spot from below; an interocellar area with a short slit-shaped pale spot between lateral ocelli; and the epicranial sutures are brown ( Figs. 120–121 View FIGURES 120‒121 ). Mandible strongly sclerotized, outer edge rounded, base with tuft of thin setae at outer edge; mandibular teeth strongly pointed; left mandible with 5 teeth; right mandible with 6 teeth; the number and arrangement of rows of short setae on the molar areas of the left and right mandibles is the same as in other species ( Fig. 122 View FIGURES 122‒127 ). Lacinia bidentate, teeth are pointed, terminal tooth strongly curved, subapical tooth less curved, and extending ca. 2/3 of terminal tooth length. Below the subapical tooth, there is a small downward-sloping projection with 3–4 submarginal setae ( Fig. 123 View FIGURES 122‒127 ). The marginal fringe of setae along the inner lacinial margin is complete ( Fig. 123 View FIGURES 122‒127 ). Abdomen brown, each tergum with two transverse pale spots on the sides of the medial line and paired small pale spots laterally; in the female larva, the spots on the last abdominal terga are faintly visible ( Figs. 120–121 View FIGURES 120‒121 ). The anal gills are absent. The legs pale, the femur darkened basally and distally, with a dark spot in the distal half close to the outer edge; the tibia basally has a short brown band on the outer edge ( Figs. 120–121 View FIGURES 120‒121 , 124 View FIGURES 122‒127 ). The fine pilosity between dark short spines in the cercal circlet is the same as that of other Perla species ( Figs. 125−127 View FIGURES 122‒127 ). A dorsal longitudinal fringe of swimming hairs is tightly pressed to the segments; the length and density of long silky hairs decrease towards the cercal apex ( Figs. 125–127 View FIGURES 122‒127 ). On the middle and apical cercal segments, long and thin intercalary setae are visible; their length exceeds the length of fine circlet hairs ( Figs. 126‒127 View FIGURES 122‒127 ).

DNA barcoding. GenBank accession numbers are PP216457‒PP216461. Sequences of P. pallida from the Caucasus showed deep COI divergence between populations from Macedonia (AEG1356), Croatia (AAL2357), Croatia (AEK2845), and Slovenia, Croatia (AEB9929), whose minimum p-distances were 8.1%, 4.8%, 4.7%, and 2.8%, respectively ( Table 2 View TABLE 2 ). However, the phylogenetic analysis showed that this species is polyphyletic ( Fig. 160 View FIGURE 160 ). In addition, P. pallida under BINs AAL2357 and AEB9929 cannot be distinguished using COI barcodes due to other species related to these BINs. Considering that P. pallida was originally described from the Caucasus, this casts doubt on the validity of European populations.

Material examined. Caucasus, Russia, Republic North Ossetia-Alania: 1 larva, Prigorodny District, Mairamadag River, Terek River Basin , altitude 690 m above sea level, 42.993308 N, 44.49815 E, 17.07.2021, coll. D. Palatov GoogleMaps ; 1♂, Alagirsky District, Komdon River near Upper Tsey village , Terek River Basin , altitude 1832 m above sea level, 42.803514 N, 43.933395 E, 25.07.2021, coll. D. Palatov GoogleMaps ; Krasnodar Kray: 2♂, Gelendzhik, Papay River, 2.5 km below Novosadovy farm, Pshada River Basin, altitude 195 m above sea level, 44.569305 N, 38.42889 E, 8.06.2021, coll. D. Palatov GoogleMaps ; 6♂, 1♀, 3 larvae, District of the Sochi City, Plastunka village , 3rd tributary of the Kutarka River , Sochi River Basin , altitude 143 m above sea level 43.672794 N, 39.772125 E, 21.07.2022, coll. D. Palatov. GoogleMaps

Additional material. Armenia, Syunik marz: 4♂, 1♀, Tzav River, about 3 km above the village Tzav , before the fork in the valley, altitude 2500 m above sea level, 39.316400, N 46.251943 E, 20.07.2014, coll. D. Palatov.

Distribution. Widespread in the Caucasus: Russia, North Ossetia-Alania, Krasnodar Kray; Armenia, Georgia, Azerbaijan, Turkey ( Anatolia) ( Zhiltzova 1956; Zwick 1975; Sivec & Stark 2002; Darilmaz et al. 2016; Murányi et al. 2021).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Plecoptera

Family

Perlidae

Genus

Perla

Loc

Perla pallida Guérin-Méneville, 1843

Teslenko, Valentina A., Palatov, Dmitry M. & Semenchenko, Alexander A. 2024
2024
Loc

Perla pallida

Guerin-Meneville 1843
1843
Loc

P. pallida

Guerin-Meneville 1843
1843
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