Two new species of Ulmeritoides Traver (Ephemeroptera: Leptophlebiidae) from Southeastern Brazil
Author
Souto, Paula Malaquias
Author
Da-Silva, Elidiomar Ribeiro
Author
Nessimian, Jorge Luiz
Author
Gonçalves, Inês Corrêa
text
Zootaxa
2016
4078
1
127
136
journal article
46816
10.11646/zootaxa.4078.1.11
4649cba5-233d-4010-b0f4-062b26ac299f
1175-5326
263491
584BBD6C-265A-4F23-9634-B441DCDE533D
Ulmeritoides tamoio
sp. nov.
(
Figures 3–4
,
10–14
,
19
)
Material examined.
HOLOTYPE
:
BRAZIL
, São Paulo, Ubatuba, Parque Estadual da Serra do Mar, Núcleo Picinguaba, Rio da Fazenda,
23°20’16.70”S
,
44°50’10.90”W
,
28.IV.2013
, Souto, P.M. leg.,
1 male
imago (
DZRJ
2376). 11
PARATYPES
: same data as
holotype
,
1 male
imago and
1 male
subimago (
DZRJ
2409); Rio de Janeiro, Serra da
Bocaina, Paraty, Sertão
do Taquari, Rio Taquari,
23°02’30.10”S
,
44°41’35.30”W
,
13.X.2012
, Souto, P.M. & Gonçalves, R.S. leg.,
1 male
imago (
DZRJ
2408); same data,
4 male
imagos (
DZRJ
2377–2378
, 2380),
1 female
imago (
DZRJ
2379),
3 male
subimagos (
DZRJ
2381).
Holotype
male imago
(in alcohol, genitalia on slide). Length of body: 8.0 mm; forewings:
8.4 mm
; hind wings:
1.1 mm
. General color brown. Forewings with costal and subcostal areas tinged with light brown; veins light brown.
Head
(
Figs 3–4
): brown, shaded with black. Upper portion of eyes light brown, lower portion black. Ocelli white, surrounded with brown and black. Antennae with scape and pedicel brown shaded with dark brown, flagella light brown.
Thorax
(
Figs 3–4
): nota orange-brownish shaded with black; sutures light brown; sclerites with darker margin; yellowish pleura; sterna brown shaded with black.
Wings
(
Figs 10–12
): hyaline, with coastal and subcoastal areas tinged with light brown; base brown. Forewings with longitudinal veins light brown, cross-veins yellowish; 7 cross-veins basal to bullae; brownish spots on bullae of veins Sc and R2; distal half of membrane, between C and R1, whitish. Hindwings with veins C, Sc, R and their cross-veins yellowish; other longitudinal and cross-veins hyaline.
Legs:
legs I brown, with apex of tibiae and tarsi lighter; tarsal claws light brown. Legs II yellowish; femora with median brown maculae; tibiae with brown apex; tarsi white shaded with brown; tarsal claws light brown. Legs III yellowish; femora with brown maculae on basal half and apex brown; tibiae yellowish; tarsi white weakly tinged with brown; tarsal claws light brown.
Abdomen
(
Figs. 3–4
): terga I–X brown shaded with dark brown, with posterior margins darker; median line dark brown. Sterna brown shaded with dark brown.
Genitalia
(
Figs. 13–14
): styliger plate, penis and forceps light brown, shaded with dark brown. Basal broad region of forceps almost 1/4 length of segment I and with crenulations on inner margin. Apex of penis lobes concave, ending in rather acute apical and mesal projections. [Caudal filaments broken off and lost. Only the bases of caudal filaments are present in one of the
paratypes
]
Variations in the
paratypes
. There is a variation in the overall color tone of the body, some
paratypes
being darker, which may be related to the time delay in fixing specimens in alcohol.
Male subimago.
Similar to imago, except the wings, which have dark grey membrane, even darker in the living specimen.
Female imago.
Length of body: 9.0 mm; forewings:
10.1 mm
.; hind wings: 2.0 mm. General color brown. Wings hyaline with brown veins.
Head:
similar to male imago.
Thorax:
orange-brownish shaded with darker brown; pleura yellowish; sterna light brown, shaded with darker brown on margin.
Wings:
wings with membrane hyaline, except coastal and subcoastal areas light brown; base tinged with dark brown. Forewings with longitudinal and cross-veins brown; 7 cross-veins basal to bullae; brownish spots on bullae of veins Sc and R2.
Hind
wings with veins C, Sc, R and their cross-veins light brown; other longitudinal and crossveins yellowish.
Legs:
leg I similar to male, only darker and shorter. Legs II and III similar to male.
Abdomen:
terga I–X brown, shaded with dark brown; with posterior line lighter; median line dark brown. Terga I–V darker than others. Sterna brown, shaded with dark brown, with median line lighter. Apex of sternum X with U-shaped cleft. Caudal filaments lost.
Egg
(
Fig. 19
): yellow. Egg mass spherical, eggs elliptical in shape. Attachment structures as sucker-like discs or plates and fiber-coil.
Female subimago.
Not collected. Observed alive just before molting to imago. Wings dark grey.
Nymph.
Unknown.
Biology.
The swarm is composed by few individuals and, as observed in the field, occurs in a short period of the year, reinforcing that species of this genus are not common and have small populations (
Domínguez et al., 2006
). The specimens were collected during the summer. The adults were collected at light traps in late evening and remain flying from 23:00 to 02:00.
Ulmeritoides tamoio
sp. nov.
occurs together with
Thraulodes jones
Gonçalves, Da-Silva & Nessimian, 2010
, however the new species remains flying for longer.
FIGURES 19–21
. SEM photographs of eggs of
Ulmeritoides
species.
19.
U. angelus
sp. nov.
, general aspect;
20–21.
U. angelus
sp. nov.
, attachments structures (20) and chorionic sculpturing showing punctation and tubercules (21).
Etymology.
tamoio
, from the tupi word “tamyîa” (or “tamuîa”) meaning “ancestor” or “grandfather”. In honor to the Tamoyo Confederation, an alliance led by the tupinambás indigenous people with the guaitacás and aimorés, against the Portuguese colonizers, between the years
1556 and 1567
. The confederation occupied the area of the southeastern coast of
Brazil
, including Ubatuba (São Paulo), the
type
locality of this new species. Name in apposition.
Remarks.
Ulmeritoides tamoio
sp. nov.
can be separated from the other species of the genus according to the following combination of characters: (1) Forewings with costal and subcostal areas tinged with light brown; (2) forewings with veins C, Sc and R1 brownish; (3) 7 cross-veins basal do bullae (
Fig. 10
); (4) forewings with brownish spots on bullae of veins Sc, R2 and R4 +5 (
Fig. 10
); (5) basal broad region of forceps almost 1/4 length of segment I (
Fig. 13
); (6) abdominal color pattern as in
Figures 3 and 4
; (7) apex of penis lobes slightly concave, ending in rather acute apical and mesal projections (
Figs 13–14
).
This species keys out to
U. huitoto
Domínguez & Zuñiga,
2003
in
Salles & Domínguez (2012)
. However, the new species can be easily distinguished by the color of the abdomen, penis structure and brownish spots on bullae of the forewings.