Early Eocene snakeflies (Raphidioptera) of western North America from the Okanagan Highlands and Green River Formation
Author
Archibald, S. Bruce
0000-0002-4397-2497
Department of Biological Sciences, Simon Fraser University, 8888 University Drive, Burnaby, British Columbia, V 5 A 1 S 6, Canada. https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 4397 - 2497 & Museum of Comparative Zoology, 26 Oxford Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 02138, United States of America & Royal British Columbia Museum, 675 Belleville Street, Victoria, British Columbia, V 8 W 9 W 2, Canada
Author
Makarkin, Vladimir N.
Federal Scientific Centre of the East Asia Terrestrial Biodiversity, Far Eastern Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Vladivo-
text
Zootaxa
2021
2021-04-01
4951
1
41
79
journal article
7413
10.11646/zootaxa.4951.1.2
d7a40f10-4145-499c-97be-3f9bc5088d2f
1175-5326
4655625
557825A0-714A-426A-917F-1C9AB7372C30
Genus
Archiinocellia
Handlirsch, 1910
, sit. nov.
Diagnosis.
Relatively small raphidiids (forewing up to
8 mm
long), distinguished from other genera of the family by the following combination of character states. Fore- and hind wings: (1) ScP short (length from termination to pterostigma greater than that of pterostigma) [relatively long ScP (length from termination to pterostigma approximately equal to or less than that of short pterostigma) in
Megaraphidia
]; (2) pterostigma elongate (4.5–5.1 times longer than width measured along to costal margin) [short in
Megaraphidia
,
Archiraphidia
]; (3) 3ra-rp located within the pterostigma; (4) RP1 twice forked, proximal fork proximad level of 3ra-rp. Hind wing: (5) two
doi
[one in
Archiraphidia
]; (6) CuA with one branch [three in
Florissontoraphidia
].
Type
species.
Archiinocellia oligoneura
, by monotypy.
Species included.
A. oligoneura
,
A. protomaculata
(
Engel, 2011
)
,
comb. nov
.
Occurrence.
Ypresian of the Okanagan Highlands at Horsefly,
British Columbia
,
Canada
,
Canada
; the late Ypresian Green River Formation,
Colorado
,
United States of America
.
Remarks.
The genus was originally considered to be of unknown family (
Handlirsch, 1910
;
Martynov, 1925
;
Carpenter, 1936
).
Aspöck
et al
. (1991)
assigned it to the
Inocelliidae
, but more recent authors have treated it again as
Raphidioptera
incertae sedis
(
e.g
.,
Oswald, 1990
;
Carpenter, 1992
;
Nel, 1993
;
Engel, 2002
,
2009
). Here, we assign it to the
Raphidiidae
by venation characteristic of the family, including the placement of crossvein 2ra-scp at the proximal end of the pterostigma.
Archiinocellia protomaculata
from the Green River Formation was originally assigned to
Agulla
(
Engel, 2011
:
Figs 1–9
). We believe that this is incorrect by its wing venation, which possesses at least three important character states not present in that genus. First, the basal 1r-m in the hind wing of this species is long and subparallel to R (clearly visible in
Fig. 17D
and the
paratype
USNM 31752), but it is crossvein-like in all known species of
Agulla
(see
e.g
.,
Carpenter, 1936
:
Fig. 1
). Secondly, the crossvein 3ra-rp in both wings is located within the pterostigma in this species, whereas it is normally located distad the pterostigma in all known species of
Agulla
(
e.g
., see
Carpenter, 1936
:
Fig. 1
); very rarely, adventitiously at the distal end of pterostigma (
e.g
., Wognum, 1959: Figs 20, 35;
Aspöck, 1987
:
Fig. 1
); and only abnormally within the pterostigma in one of the wings (
e.g
., Wognum, 1959: Fig. 21). Thirdly, ScP is very short in this species, whereas it is long in all species of
Agulla
(from its termination to the pterostigma is nearly equal to the length of pterostigma or slightly shorter in the species of
Agulla
).
We assigned
Archiinocellia protomaculata
to this genus as its venation is very similar to the preserved venation of
A. oligoneura
, agreeing with all character states of the genus diagnosis.
Of extant genera, the venation of
Archiinocellia protomaculata
is most similar to that of
Alena
Navás, 1916
, the southern-most genus of
Raphidiidae
in the Western Hemisphere, occurring in south-western
United States of America
and
Mexico
(south to
Chiapas
) with ten species (
Aspöck, 1975
;
Aspöck & Aspöck, 2013
). A combination of the following features is characteristic of only five species of this genus among extant
Raphidiidae
: (A) the basal crossvein 1r-m in the hind wing is long, subparallel to R; (B) very short ScP (from its termination to pterostigma is much longer than the length of pterostigma), and (C) the proximal position of the crossvein 3ra-rp (
i.e
., located within the pterostigma) in both wings. The venation of
A. protomaculata
shares all of these character states. It is most similar to that of some species of the Mexican genus
Alena
(
e.g.
,
Alena americana
Carpenter, 1958
,
A. caudata
(
Navás, 1914b
)
; see
Carpenter, 1958
:
Fig. 1
;
Aspöck & Aspöck, 1970
:
Fig. 3
). The only venational feature clearly distinguishing
A
.
protomaculata
from extant species of
Alena
is the branching of RP1. It is forked twice, with the proximal fork located very deeply, proximad the level of 3ra-rp, while RP1 is forked once in most species of
Alena
, and in the few other species of
Alena
it is forked twice (
i.e
.,
A. americana
,
A. tenochtitlana
Aspöck & Aspöck, 1978
), the proximal fork is relatively shallow (distad the level of 3ra-rp). However, the shape of the male terminal segments of
Archiinocellia protomaculata
fundamentally differs from those of all species of
Alena
. In
A. protomaculata
, the ninth tergite extends laterally to the ventral margin, and is probably fused with the ninth sternite to form a ring, a plesiomorphic condition at the family level, characteristic of all
Raphidiidae
except
Alena
, in which these are widely separated (Haring
et al
., 2010). The apparent absence of sclerotized gonocoxites
9 in
A. protomaculata
is also noteworthy and probably plesiomorphic at the family level. But we do not know if these terminal characters are also shared by other two species of the genus.
In all extant genera, these are the largest sclerites of the terminalia and are strongly sclerotized (
Aspöck & Aspöck, 2008
). Gonocoxites 9 are also well developed in the Baltic amber
Succinoraphidia exhibens
Aspöck & Aspöck
(
Aspöck & Aspöck, 2004
:
Fig. 6
).
Makarkin & Archibald (2014)
referred
Archiraphidia
? somnolenta
(
Scudder, 1890
) from Florissant to that genus only provisionally. It is similar to
Archiinocellia
in some ways, sharing with
Archiinocellia oligoneura
the following character states: (1)
Archiraphidia
? somnolenta
has a long pterostigma, 4.5 to 5 times longer than wide (
A. oligoneura
, 4.6–4.7), while those of
Archiraphidia
species are much shorter, 2.3 to 3.2 times longer than wide, and (2) both have two
doi
in the hind wing (one in species of
Archiraphidia
). However, the ScP of
Archiraphidia
? somnolenta
is slightly longer than in
Archiinocellia oligoneura
and
A. protomaculata
, somewhat differing from character state (1) of the
Archiinocellia
diagnosis, and the proximal-most branching of RP1 is clearly distad the level of 3ra-rp, contradicting diagnostic character state (4). The taxonomic placement of
Archiraphidia
? somnolenta
will be clarified by the discovery of more complete specimens; the species does not belong to
Archiinocellia
and probably does not belong to
Archiraphidia
.
Of fossil genera, the venation of
Archiinocellia
is most similar to that of
Archiiraphidia
and
Florissontoraphidia
, which share character states A–C. However,
Archiinocellia
clearly differs from these genera as stated in its diagnosis.