Togoperla condyla Li & DeWalt
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.282959 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4680836 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03CB631A-FFB5-FFB3-FF01-F990FB1DFE03 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Togoperla condyla Li & DeWalt |
status |
sp. nov. |
Togoperla condyla Li & DeWalt View in CoL , sp. nov.
( Figs. 1–10 View FIGURES 1 – 5 View FIGURES 6 – 7 View FIGURES 8 – 10 )
Diagnosis. Males of this species are distinguished by a dark brown pronotum, a pale area around the compound eyes that extends anterolaterally, and by legs with yellow and black or brown bands. Additionally, the apical half of the aedeagal sac is greatly enlarged and the armature on the dorsal surface of basal tube covers most of the swollen apex.
Male. Forewing length 20.2–20.8 mm, hindwing length 18.0– 18.4 mm. General color brown to dark brown in dorsal view, yellow to brown in ventral surface. Head mostly dark brown except pale area around compound eyes and anterolateral margins of the head. Compound eyes dark; antennae brown but scape darker. Pronotum dark brown with vague rugosities, posterior corners rounded ( Figs. 1–2 View FIGURES 1 – 5 ); wings brown, costal area pale yellow, veins brown; legs banded with dark brown at the base and apex of both femora and tibiae, a wide, yellow band separating dark bands ( Fig. 3 View FIGURES 1 – 5 ). Abdomen brownish.
Terminalia . Tergum 5 produced into an emarginate lobe with posterior sensilla basiconica ( Figs. 4 View FIGURES 1 – 5 and 6 View FIGURES 6 – 7 ). Terga 6-9 with brown medial area covered by patches of long setae, the setae of tergum 9 only present on anterior 1/4. Hemiterga of tergum 10 almost parallel-sided in dorsal view, apex slightly narrowed apically in lateral view, lobe about 2.5X as long as basal callus in dorsal view, basal callus and hemitergal tips bearing sensilla basiconia ( Figs. 4–7 View FIGURES 1 – 5 View FIGURES 6 – 7 ). Aedeagal tube basally with a typical dorsal lobe, and a pair of finger-like dorsolateral lobes armed with tiny spines; sac with basal half tubular and apical half greatly enlarged, armature present on dorsal surface of basal tube of sac and covering most of the swelling apex, tip bearing two membranous lateral lobes with no armature ( Fig. 8 View FIGURES 8 – 10 ).
Female. Unknown.
Type Material. Holotype: male ( HIST – PLEt001 ), China: Zhejiang Province, Lin’an County, Mt. Tianmushan , Dongpu stream, 119.5208 E, 30.3622 N, 2011. V.14, Weihai Li. GoogleMaps Paratype: male ( HIST – PLEt002 ), Guangxi Province, Jinxiu County, Mt. Dayaoshan, Fenzhan village , unnamed tributary of Changtan River, 110.1897 E, 24.1363 N, 2012.IV.8, Weihai Li. GoogleMaps
Etymology. The specific epithet refers to the enlarged apex of the aedeagal sac.
Distribution. China (Zhejiang, Guangxi).
Remarks. The new species keys to T. perpicta Klapálek, 1921 in Stark and Sivec (2008), but it differs in having an entirely dark brown pronotum with a wider posterior portion in contrast to the yellow brown median band and narrower posterior portion in T. perpicta . It differs also in the fully extruded aedeagal sac that has a greatly enlarged, fist-shaped tip with an apical accessory lobe. In T. perpicta the sac bears a pair of naked accessory lobes dorsally and terminates in a long lobe with fine hairs apically ( Stark and Sivec 2008). The holotype was collected with a single male of T. perpicta that allows us to directly compare the two species. Togoperla condyla was collected using a sweep net along two shallow, 2–3 m wide streams with pebbles and boulders substrate ( Fig. 11 View FIGURE 11 ).
Given that the known range of the genus is limited to temperate southern China, Japan, Thailand, and Vietnam, the new species will likely be confined to this region. We present a revised key to the males including the new species and the species described subsequently to Stark & Sivec (2008) by Cao & Bae (2010).
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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