Neoperla bipolaris, 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 : 99-101

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.8154238

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E12C876C-4A08-FFE0-FF4F-FBA2FF4B0E18

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Neoperla bipolaris
status

sp. nov.

42. Neoperla bipolaris n. sp.

( Figs. 223–226 View FIGURES 223–226 )

Type material: 1♀ holotype ( NEOP175 , slide DNA390) , 2♀ paratypes ( NEOP176 ) , Republic of Angola, 21.XI.13, Cuanza Norte Prov., 20km W N’dalantando [9.30S, 14.92E], 337m, P. Schuele leg. -18- ( SMNS) GoogleMaps .

Additional material: 1♀, [ United Republic of Tanzania] Tanganyika, 23-II-62, T. Williams ( USNM; after figs 29, 30 in T. Moore, 1991) .

Habitus. WL 12.2–13.2mm. Body yellow, center of head ochre, tentorial calluses, M-line and anterolateral lobes darker, grey. Head light yellowish grey along eyes and on occiput, an arched black fascia along the occipital suture, a sharp tip projecting forward from between ocelli. Antenna and cercus blackish, segments 1–3 lighter. Palpi with grey tips. Pronotum dark ash grey. Mesonotum between wings bases yellowish brown. Femora dorsodistally dark grey, half of foreleg, ¼ of hind leg, upper edge of knee yellow in all. Tibiae dark except very tip, tarsi dark. Wings blackish-grey, veins dark except brownish on a short basal stretch of costal space. Front wings darker than hind wings.

Male. Unknown.

Female ( Fig. 226 View FIGURES 223–226 ). Anterior half of S8 with diffuse transverse brown macula, otherwise unmodified. Vagina shorter than sternite, base slender, anterior portion with attachment of oviduct and SSt wider. A patch of slender straight spines of variable size on either side of stalk. SSt short, stout forming an incomplete ring, base longitudinally folded and wrinkled. The armature of triangular scales forms a narrow basal strip which widens quickly, covering entire diameter and ending at a short distance from attachment of spermathecal duct and the curled spermatheca.

Egg ( Figs. 223–225 View FIGURES 223–226 ).335*200µm, stout, drop-shaped, operculum rounded, anchor pole flat, width corresponding to 1/3 of maximum egg width ( Figs. 223, 225 View FIGURES 223–226 ). Chorion with dense unordered punctures, at both poles there are low impunctate radial ribs amongst the punctures ( Fig. 224 View FIGURES 223–226 ). At the anchor pole ribs are connected to a ring of cells on the sessile collar, on the broad operculum ribs are connected to a network of delicate polygones, reminiscent of striate eggs. Micropyles are unmodified and exposed ( Fig. 224 View FIGURES 223–226 , arrow). Anchor mushroom-shaped with long solid stem, the anchor cavity is deep, funnel-shaped.

DNA ( Figs. 492 View FIGURE 492 , 496 View FIGURE 496 ). The female holotype and female paratype from Angola were sequenced for the COX1 DNA barcode fragment. They cluster together with near maximum support (98.4/100/100), and the species is maximally supported (100/100/100) as sister to N. schuelei n. sp..

Note. The chorion structure near the egg poles suggests ancestors of N. bipolaris had striate eggs.

Etymology. The name is a Latin adjective referring to the occurrence of rudimentary striae near both egg poles.

SMNS

Staatliches Museum fuer Naturkund Stuttgart

USNM

Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Plecoptera

Family

Perlidae

Genus

Neoperla

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