The new fossil lacewings of Grammolingiidae (Neuroptera) from the Jurassic of Central Asia and Mongolia, with notes on biogeography of the family
Author
Khramov, Alexander V.
text
Zootaxa
2012
3478
297
308
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.212283
87c1b7d7-8ba9-48b9-8069-226863c4818d
1175-5326
212283
Litholingia longa
sp. nov.
Description
.
Holotype
. Forewing (
Fig. 4
). Length
35 mm
as preserved (estimated complete length
40 mm
), width
11 mm
(estimated width
12–13 mm
). There are two rows of cells along entire length of the wing. Longitudinal vein b located between the stem of Rs and basal part of MP and fused with Rs near to origin MA from Rs. MP forked after origin MA from Rs. Distal part of MP2 deeply dichotomously branched. CuP pectinately branched, the first of its 4 branches forked. Branches of A1 connected by crossveins and forked.
FIGURE 4.
Litholingia longa
sp. nov.
, Sai Sagul locality, Kyrgyzstan, upper Lower Jurassic – lower Middle Jurassic. (A). The photograph of the proximal part of the forewing. Holotype, PIN № 1526/1. (B) The drawing of the holotype, PIN № 1526/1. Scale bar represents 5 mm.
Specimens
PIN
№
2389/526,
№
3073/840,
№
3073/842,
№
3073/453,
№
3073/447,
№
3073/446,
№
3073/448
. Forewings (
Fig.5
). They slightly vary in size and belong to wings of medium length (
35–45 mm
). Their costal area contains two rows of cells. All specimens have the distinct oblique or longitudinal vein b between the stem of Rs and the basal part of MP. In the most of specimens vein b fused with Rs at the point of the separation MA from Rs, but also could join it distally, as in the fragment PIN № 3073/453 (
Fig. 5
D). MP commonly forked slightly after the separation MA from Rs, but also could forked at the level of it (as in PIN 3073/448,
Fig. 5
G). The anal area is preserved in specimen PIN № 2389/526 (
Fig. 5
A): A2 terminates by three short branches, A3 is a simple.
Type
material
.
Holotype
PIN
№ 1526/1, an incomplete forewing.
Kyrgyzstan
: Batken Province, Batken district on the border with
Tajikistan
; Sai-Sagul locality, upper Lower Jurassic – lower Middle Jurassic.
Other material examined
. Specimens
PIN
№ 2389/526, № 3073/840, № 3073/842, № 3073/453, № 3073/ 447, № 3073/446, № 3073/448, all are fragments of the forewing proximal part. Same locality.
Etymology
. From the Latin word
longus, - a
, meaning “long”.
Comments.
The
holotype
belongs to
Litholingia
, because A1 terminates on the posterior margin after the separation Rs1 from Rs, and CuA forked after the bifurcation of CuP. The imprint is slightly crumpled in transverse direction (R1 is not visible, the area of CuA is deformed).
L. longa
differs from other four species of
Litholingia
(
L. rhora
Ren, 2002
,
L. eumorpha
Ren, 2002
,
L. polychotoma
Ren, 2002
and
L. ptesa
Shi
et al
., 2011
) by the pectinate CuP. Similar structure of CuP is observed in the forewing of
Leptolingia calonervis
Shi
et al
., 2011
, whose CuP also has 4 branches. It corroborates the assumption of Shi
et al.
(2011), that CuP of
Grammolingiidae
might be not only dichotomously branched, but also slightly pectinately branched.
The vein b, which is apparent in forewings of
L. longa
, may be interpreted as the remnant of the basal part of media, which anterior branch (MA) in the very beginning falls into Rs and immediately after that separates from it, like branches of Rs (consequently, the first vein, that separates from Rs is MA and only the second is Rs1) (
Martynov 1928
). The remnant of the
b
asal part of media (vein
b
) is usually visible only in hind wings (
Carpenter 1943
). However, other specialists suppose, that b is only a modified crossvein (
Comstock 1918
,
Tjeder 1957
). In any case, the presence of this vein in forewings of
L. longa
is an important peculiarity.
The comparison of seven described specimens (
Fig. 5
) allows making conclusion about the individual variability of wings of
Grammolingiidae
, if these specimens really belong to the same species.