New records and combinations for Neotropical Leptophlebiidae (Ephemeroptera)
Author
Peters, J. G.
Author
Flowers, R. W.
Author
Hubbard, M. D.
Author
Domínguez, E.
Author
Savage, H. M.
text
Zootaxa
2005
1054
51
60
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.170066
e3737643-9288-451a-b814-4f22256e41a4
11755326
170066
Hagenulus marshalli
sp. n.
(
Figures 3–9
)
This new species is represented by two unassociated male imagos in good condition from
Ecuador
. Because it represents a significant generic record for South
America
, it is described now even though nymphs and females are unknown. Previously,
Hagenulus
was believed to be restricted to the greater Antilles (
Cuba
,
Haiti
,
Jamaica
and
Puerto Rico
).
Male imago (in alcohol). Body: 6.0–
6.5 mm
, forewings
6.8–7.2 mm
, hind wing
0.7 mm
; foreleg
6.5–7.3 mm
; cerci
12.5 mm
. Head brown, dorsal portion of eyes meeting on meson of head, ocelli large. Pronotum light brown, heavily washed with blackish brown on median carina and laterally; meso and metanotum yellowish brown, pleural area extending anteriorly from forewing to pronotum washed with darker brown. Pro and mesosternum brown, mesobasisternum a little lighter, median margins of mesofurcasternal protuberances darker; metasternum heavily washed with blackish brown. Forewings: Sc brown, R a lighter brown, other longitudinal veins pale yellowbrown to hyaline, cross veins dark brown, surrounded by small blackish brown clouds in basal half of wing, clouds heaviest medially (
Fig. 3
), membrane of costal and subcostal area pale golden brown, the color fading to hyaline throughout remainder of wing membrane.
Hind
wings with reduced venation, veins and membrane pale yellowbrown to hyaline (
Fig. 4–5
); hind wings curved dorsally over scutellum (
Fig. 6
). Legs: ratios of foreleg segments to tibia (length of tibiae
2.9–3.1 mm
): femur 0.46–0.49: tarsal segments 0.03; 0.32–0.34; 0.22–0.29; 0.13–0.14; 0.06–0.07; femur of foreleg brown, faded to pale brown basally and a little darker medially; remainder of foreleg segments with tibia pale yellowish brown and tarsal segments paler, a narrow dark brown band near apex of tibia, apical third to apical half of tarsal segments 2–4 darker brown, tarsal segments 1 and 5 without color markings; other legs with light yellowish brown femora, tibiae and tarsi paler. Abdominal tergum 1 light brown with narrow blackish brown posterior margin and lateral area; terga 2–5 hyaline with short, anterior sublateral dark streaks and blackish brown posterior band extended laterally and anteriorly as in
Fig. 9
; terga 6 and 7 with similar lateral patterns, although posterior bands reduced or absent; terga 8–10 opaque, light brown, with anterior blackish brown wash on terga 8–9, tergum 10 with only anterior submedian streaks. Abdominal sterna 1 and 2 heavily washed with blackish brown, wash continuing anterolaterally and anterosubmedially to sternum 3; sterna 4–8 with light blackish brown markings anterolaterally, marks progressively reduced in size on posterior sterna; sternum 9 light yellowish brown. Genitalia: styliger plate light brown; forceps pale yellowbrown; penes light brown, divided to near base, divergent, without spines, penes somewhat twisted as in
Fig. 7–8
. Cerci hyaline with blackish brown rings at articulations; median filament broken off and missing.
Etymology: species is named for G. B.
Marshall
who assisted C. W. and L. B. O’Brien in the collection of many aquatic insects in South
America
.
Material:
Holotype
, one male imago,
Ecuador
:
30 km
W of Puyo,
27–IV–1978
, L.B. & C. W. O’Brien;
paratype
, one male imago, same data as
holotype
. Deposited in collections of Florida A&M University.
Diagnosis:
Hagenulus marshalli
sp. n.
can be distinguished from all other described species of
Hagenulus
by the following characters: 1) fork of vein MP in the forewing not symmetrical (MP2 attached to MP1 at a cross vein as in
Fig. 3
); 2) penes without spines and slightly twisted (
Fig. 7–8
); and 3) color pattern as illustrated in
Fig. 9
.
Discussion: The variation in foreleg ratios is mostly due to a relatively short third tarsal segment on one of the
paratype
forelegs. All forelegs were present, but only two other legs of a potential eight were found loose in the vial. The color pattern was the same on both, but it is not known if these were meso or metathoracic legs or to which specimen each belonged. Both are placed with the
holotype
. The intensity of color on abdominal segments 8–10 and on the mesosternum is lighter in the
holotype
than in the
paratype
.
In the forewings, MP2 is closely tied to MP1 by a short cross vein, not joined symmetrically as in other species of
Hagenulus
. Nevertheless, this species is clearly a member of the
Hagenulus
group of genera because of the unique shape of the hind wing, the attachment of ICu1 to CuP, and forceps typical for the genus.
Kluge (1994)
treated as subgenera all members of the
Hagenulus
group from
Cuba
previously treated as genera by
Peters (1971)
, including
Hagenulus
,
Borinquena
,
Careospina
, and
Traverina
, and established two new subgenera,
Poecilophlebia
and
Turquinophlebia
. One species
Hagenulus
(
Careospina
)
evanescens
Kluge, 1994
, has the characteristic hind wing of
Hagenulus
, penes somewhat similar to
Hagenulus marshalli
sp. n.
, a female with a short ovipositor, and nymphs without filterfeeding adaptations. In addition to wing characters, nymphs of the
type
species of
Hagenulus
(
H. caligatus
Eaton, 1882
) and a second Cuban species (
H. morrisonae
Peters, 1971
) have unique nymphs with filterfeeding adaptations. For this reason,
Kluge (1994)
removed all nonCuban species of
Hagenulus
from the subgenus
Hagenulus
as their nymphs were not known with certainty, but he did not give them any new taxonomic placement. The same problem applies to
Hagenulus marshalli
sp. n.
, which also might represent a species of
Careospina
from which it would then be distinguished by the heavy coloration of the wing, the asymmetrical MP fork, and male eyes which meet dorsally.
Staniczek (2003)
described one new genus (
Hagenulites
) and three new species of the genus
Borinquena
from Dominican amber (Tertiary: Eocene to Miocene); genera and species described by Staniczek all possess a symmetrical MP fork. The asymmetrical MP fork in
Hagenulus marshalli
n. sp.
eventually may indicate a new genus, but it seems best to delay such action until females and nymphs are known. At present, we prefer to retain described species of
Hagenulus
in this, the oldest genus, and to treat all of Kluge’s (1994) subgenera as genera until more extensive revisionary work is completed.