Discovery of a new stonefly genus with three new species from mid-Cretaceous Burmese amber (Plecoptera: Perlidae)
Author
Chen, Zhi-Teng
Author
Wang, Bo
Author
Du, Yu-Zhou
text
Zootaxa
2018
2018-02-12
4378
4
573
580
journal article
30770
10.11646/zootaxa.4378.4.8
0ac3d1fd-a6e6-46fd-819e-5e39e9cce06f
1175-5326
1171678
E08BBE86-38FF-4960-B02F-686F2187FE73
Genus
Largusoperla
gen. nov.
Type species.
Largusoperla acus
gen. et sp. nov.
, by monotypy.
Diagnosis.
The new genus exhibits typical characters of the family
Perlidae
, such as the presence of slender palpi, thoracic gill remnants, euplantulae, short first tarsal segment, and the numerous crossveins in basal half of forewing’s costal field. Comparative morphological analysis concerning the terminalia structures and other habitus characters further confirms that no generic definition from extant
Perlidae
applies to the new genus. It can be distinguished from other genera of
Perlidae
by having the combination of the following characters: 1) triocellate; 2) head with dark stigma covering ocelli; 3) pronotum brown, rugose but median area pale; 4) abdominal terga with darker lateral markings; 5) abdominal segments posterolaterally extended; 6) paraprocts distinctly enlarged, usually upcurved and with various modifications apically; 7) sternum 9 with a small elevated lobe 8) cerci very short, no more than half-length of abdomen.
Etymology.
The genus name is a combination of the words
Larguso
and
perla
; the first Latin word means the specimens’ large paraprocts, while the second word refers to the extant genus
Perla
Geoffroy, 1762
, which is the
type
genus of
Perlidae
.
Remarks.
The familial affiliation of the new genus as
Perlidae
is based on the following characters: slender and filiform of palpi, presence of thoracic gill remnants, short first tarsal segment, presence of euplantulae on first and second tarsal segments, and numerous crossveins in basal half of forewing’s costal field (
Zwick 1980
,
2000
, Nelson 2009). The family
Perlidae
contains two subfamiles,
Perlinae
and
Acroneuriinae
(
Zwick 1973
, Stark & Gaufin 1976). The
Perlinae
has divided tergum 10 forming projected hemiterga and has reduced paraprocts (
Zwick 1980
,
2000
, Sivec
et al.
1988). While in
Acroneuriinae
, the hemiterga are absent; the paraprocts are sclerotized and upcurved, usually with sharp apices (
Zwick 2000
, Murányi & Li 2016). The absence of projected hemiterga (
Figs. 6
,
13
), the well-developed paraprocts (
Figs. 5–7
,
12–13
,
19
), and the hammer of sternum 9 (
Figs. 5
,
12
,
19
) provide support for the new genus to be a member of the
Acroneuriinae
.
Three tribes are included in
Acroneuriinae
:
Acroneuriini
, which is distinguished by enlarged transverse epiproct and by the sternal hammer forming a low callus or absent;
Kiotinini
, which usually has one enlarged, valve-shaped proventricular fold in the nymphal gut; and
Anacroneuriini
, which has paired opposed sclerotized hooks and the hammer is a raised knob or absent (
Zwick 2000
, Stark 2001, Murányi & Li 2016). Though the epiproct and aedeagus are invisible in the preserved specimens, the elevated lobe on sternum 9 (
Figs. 5
,
12
,
19
) may suggest a tribal assignment to
Anacroneuriini
. The extant genera of
Anacroneuriini
usually have spinose patches on abdominal terga, with relatively small paraprocts and long cerci, and often with two ocelli (Stark 2001). However, the new genus has distinctly large paraprocts, short cerci, and three ocelli. Notably, most of
Acroneuriini
have short cerci and three ocelli. The new genus may be a stem group of
Anacroneuriini
+
Acroneuriini
.