Revision of the Megaloptera (Insecta: Neuropterida) of Madagascar
Author
Liu, Xingyue
Author
Price, Benjamin W.
Author
Hayashi, Fumio
Author
Moor, Ferdinand De
Author
Yang, Ding
text
Zootaxa
2014
3796
2
320
336
journal article
45753
10.11646/zootaxa.3796.2.5
834b45f2-fe77-4830-b065-f4eaf0daaa47
1175-5326
226782
17CE3C39-35B5-43D4-9D5F-37E5A53779FE
Genus
Haplosialis
Navás
Haplosialis
Navás, 1927
: 31
.
Type
species:
Protosialis madegassa
Navás, 1927
: 30
, original designation.
Diagnosis.
Adults. Forewing length ~9.0–
10.5 mm
in males; ~11.0–15.0 mm in females. Body generally pale to dark brown. Head generally orange, sometimes with dark markings on frons and vertex (
Figs. 5–7
). Antennae pilose, approximately half the length of the forewing. Compound eyes strongly produced in males; ocelli absent. Labrum ~4.0–5.0 times wider than long, lateral margins rounded, front margin slightly emarginated. Prothorax>2.0 times wider than long, pronotum usually with dark vittae laterally. Forewing (
Fig. 4
) 4.0 times longer than wide, minutely hirsute, margins pilose; costal area feebly broadened proximally, with 5–8 distinct costal crossveins; sc-r present; Rs 2-branched; MA 2-branched; MP 2-branched, anterior branch mostly simple, but occasionally bifurcated, posterior branch mostly bifurcated, but sometimes simple; CuA 2-branched; three crossveins between R and Rs. Hindwing slightly broader than forewing, about 3.0 times as long as wide; 2–5 distinct costal crossveins proximally; venation similar to forewing, with three crossveins between R and Rs, MA mostly with two simple branches, with anterior branch sometimes bifurcated. Male ninth tergum (
Fig. 32
) transversely arched, posterior margin medially produced in lateral view; ectoproct paired, distally protruding into a slender and dorsally curved process; eleventh gonocoxite (
Figs. 32–35
) nearly as wide as ninth tergum, transversely arched, posteriorly with a pair of slender projections, which are directed dorsolaterally with hook-like tip; membrane between ninth sternum and eleventh gonocoxite distinctly protruding posteriad. Female seventh sternum (
Figs. 36–37
) broad, posterior margin strongly produced medially into an acutely pointed projection; eighth gonocoxite (
Fig. 37
) small, ovoid, medially with a longitudinal incision; eighth gonapophyses (
Fig. 37
) transversely arched, slightly sclerotized, sparsely setose on anterolateral portions; ninth gonocoxite (
Fig. 36
) broad, apex bearing rather small gonostylus.
Larva (
Fig. 9
). Head orange. Prothorax orange, meso- and metathorax pale yellow, with reticulated patterns of brownish marks. Abdomen dark purplish brown, dorsally with transverse yellowish stripes and paired, yellowish, submedian, comma-shaped markings on each segment.
Remarks.
Haplosialis
is the most poorly studied alderfly genus due to the scarcity of specimens. This genus comprises two extant species:
H. afra
and
H. madegassa
, both of which were originally described as species of the genus
Protosialis
van der Weele, 1909.
Haplosialis
in appearance resembles
Protosialis
by the orange head and pronotum and by the similar wing venation. However, the widely separated male ectoproct, the shape of male eleventh gonocoxite, and the setose female eighth gonapophyses indicate a close relationship between
Haplosialis
and the genus
Indosialis
Lestage, 1927
, which is endemic to the Oriental realm (
Liu
et al.
2008
). The
syntypes
of
H. madegassa
, were deposited in the Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle, Paris (MNHN) and the L. Navás collection (
Navás 1927
), but cannot be found currently. The
syntype
in the L. Navás collection is probably lost. The
syntype
in MNHN has been misplaced, following a returned loan within the last 10 years (Dr. J. Legrand, MNHN, personal communication). If the MNHN
syntype
is confirmed to be lost, a new genus-type of
Haplosialis
should be designated.