A new genus of Hemerobiidae (Neuroptera) from Baltic amber, with a critical review of the Cenozoic Megalomus - like taxa and remarks on the wing venation variability of the family
Author
Makarkin, Vladimir N.
Author
Wedmann, Sonja
Author
Weiterschan, Thomas
text
Zootaxa
2016
4179
3
345
370
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.4179.3.2
25c610d4-e534-4199-985a-dd92fc65f770
1175-5326
164037
717A61EB-0FCC-49C9-AD1B-A37D8E4D97D0
Genus
Proneuronema
gen. nov.
Type species.
Proneuronema minor
sp. nov.
Diagnosis.
May be distinguished from other hemerobiid genera by a combination of the following character states: in forewing, [1] ScP and RA separate distally; [2] at least four subcostal crossveins; [3] additional pre-3ra-rp [=pre-3ir1] crossveins absent; [4] crossveins proximad third gradate series between RP branches absent; [5] two to three ORBs; [6] distal-most ORB strongly pectinate; [7] ORB1 pectinate, with anteriorly-directed branches; [8] branches of CuA very long; [9] crossveins between branches of CuA continue in outer (fourth) gradate series; in hind wing, [10] basal 1r-m crossvein entering RP slightly distad origin of RP1; [11] two to four crossveins in second gradate series.
Species included
.
Proneuronema wehri
(
Makarkin
et al
., 2003
)
,
comb. nov.
, from the early Eocene of North America;
P. gradatum
sp. nov.
, and
P. minor
sp. nov
.
from the late Eocene Baltic amber.
Etymology.
From the Greek
pro
, before, and
Neuronema
, a genus-group name, in reference to the most closely related extant genus. Gender neuter (ICZN, Article 30.1.2).
Remarks.
The new genus is most closely related to the extant Asian genus
Neuronema
McLachlan, 1869
, based on the similarity of the male and female terminalia and wing venation (see below for details).
The early Eocene ‘
Cretomerobius
’
wehri
Makarkin
et al
., 2003
from the North America Okanagan Highlands (Republic locality) probably belongs to this new genus. Its assignment to
Cretomerobius
was erroneous. All the forewing diagnostic character states are present in this species, except character state #4. However, this latter might be intraspecific variability as in one additional specimen of this or a closely related species the crossveins proximad third gradate series between RP branches are also absent (i.e., character state #4 is present) (S.B. Archibald, pers. comm.). Therefore, we assign the species to this genus, as
Proneuronema wehri
(
Makarkin
et al
., 2003
)
,
comb. nov
.
, the venation of which is most similar to that of
P. gradatum
sp. nov
.
Some
unnamed hemerobiid specimens reported from the early
Eocene
of
Europe
belong to this new genus.
The
majority of these are from the
Mo-clay
of
Denmark
, most are probably from the
Fur Formation
(
Henriksen
1922
:
Fig. 5
;
Larsson
1975
:
Fig. 6
;
Rust
1999b
: Fig. 81, Pl. 24b,c), and one each from
Havighorst
(
Illies
1941:
Fig. 4
) and
Greifswalder Oie Island
(
Obst
&
Ansorge
2012
:
Fig. 10
), both in
northern Germany. In
general, hemerobiids from the
Mo-clay
are numerous (perhaps 400–
500 specimens
:
Ansorge
1997b
;
Rust
1999a
), but only these few have been described or figured.
Also
, hemerobiids are quite common in the
Greifswalder Oie
deposits, and these are mainly conspecific with the
Danish Mo-clay
species (
J. Ansorge
, pers. comm.).
The
venation of all these figured early
Eocene
members of
Proneuronema
gen. nov.
is clearly more similar to
P. minor
sp. nov
.
than to
P. gradatum
sp. nov
.