Notes On The Genus Phanoperla Banks From Sri Lanka And India (Plecoptera: Perlidae)
Author
Mason, Denise
Box 4045, Department of Biology, Mississippi College, Clinton, Mississippi 39058, U. S. A. E-mail: dmason @ mc. edu
dmason@mc.edu
Author
Stark, Bill P.
Box 4045, Department of Biology, Mississippi College, Clinton, Mississippi 39058, U. S. A. E-mail: stark @ mc. edu
stark@mc.edu
text
Illiesia
2015
11
4
29
40
journal article
http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4760908
d92d447b-3342-41ca-bdcd-1175c037416f
1854-0392
4760908
7F93F639-6206-40B9-A63B-071DA459E8ED
Phanoperla wedda
Zwick
(
Figs. 22-27
)
Phanoperla wedda
Zwick 1982a:118
.
Holotype
♂
(United States National Museum),
Hasalaka Oya
,
Kandy District
,
Ceylon
[Sri Lanka]
Material examined.
SRI LANKA
:
Matale District
,
Kibissa
, 0.5 miles
W of Sigiriya Jungle
,
28 June-4 July 1978
, K.
V
.
Krombein
,
7♂
,
7♀
(
USNM
).
Ratnapura District
,
Balihyloya
,
9-10 April 1978
,
M.D. Hubbard
,
T
.
Wijesinhe
,
1♀
(
USNM
).
Uggalkaltota
,
23-26 June 1978
, K.
V
.
Krombein, P.B
.
Karunaratne
,
T
.
Wijesinhe, L
.
Jayawickrema, N
.
Karanaratne
,
29♂
,
15♀
(
USNM
)
.
Egg.
Spindle shaped. Length ca. 364-381 μm, equatorial width ca. 270-280 μm (
Fig. 22
). Collar ca. 25-29 μm long and ca. 102-114 μm wide, margin slightly flanged and irregularly incised (
Figs. 23-24
μm), sides bearing a series of thick vertical ridges (ca.
10 in
lateral aspect); ridges continue onto body of egg for ca. 142 μm, forming a series of narrow striae, subtended on each side by a row of punctations; broad sulci between striae without punctations (
Figs. 22-23, 26
). Mesal chorionic zone (ca. 178 μm wide) consists of rather widely spaced coarse pits which extend over micropylar row and become somewhat finer beyond micropyles (
Fig. 25
). Lid covered with follicle cell impressions, most containing five pits. Micropylar orifices circular, without prominent sperm guides (
Fig. 27
).
Comments.
The scanning electron micrographs provide a few subtle chorionic details not observed in
Zwick’s (1982a)
description. These include, 1) the extension of chorionic striae (or “ribs”) onto the collar (
Fig. 8
), 2) the presence of FCIs on the lid, and 3) continuation of the fine punctations to the base of lid (not shown in Zwick’s
Fig. 24c
, but noted in his description as “…punctures, very fine along otherwise invisible suture of lid;…”). Although the egg appears distinctive among the Sri Lankan species, several species (e.g.
P. huang
Sivec & Stark 2010b
;
P. magnaspina
Sivec & Stark 2011
;
P. uchida
Sivec & Stark 2010b
) from other areas have eggs with a mixture of similar chorionic striae and punctations (
Sivec & Stark 2010b
;
2011
). The common occurrence of this egg pattern in other species groups raises the question of whether the two named species in the
testacea
-group with unknown females (
P. ceylonica
,
P. srilanka
) might have eggs similar enough to those of
P. wedda
(also included in this group) to go undetected. We have examined at least
one egg
from every female listed above with light microscopy and have examined several eggs (ca. 10) from each of
10 females
with SEM. No significant variation of the chorionic pattern has been detected but additional samples are needed from more localities to test this hypothesis.
The following key is modified from that of
Zwick (1982a)
but includes only males of species known from
India
and
Sri Lanka
. The Sri Lankan Plecopteran fauna is completely endemic, consequently the initial couplet is based on geographic separation.