Tortopsis, Molineri, Carlos, 2010

Molineri, Carlos, 2010, A cladistic revision of Tor top us Needham & Murphy with description of the new genus Tortopsis (Ephemeroptera: Polymitarcyidae), Zootaxa 2481, pp. 1-36 : 22-23

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.195431

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5690577

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03F39207-FFAC-FFC8-7EFC-F932F7EFDC89

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Tortopsis
status

gen. nov.

Tortopsis View in CoL gen. nov.

Tortopus Needham & Murphy View in CoL (in part), 1924: 23; Ulmer (in part), 1933: 197; Traver (in part), 1950: 596; McCafferty, 1975: 489; Scott et al. 1959; Molineri 2008

Type-species: Campsurus unguiculatus Ulmer , original designation.

Species composition: T. bruchianus , T. limoncocha sp. nov., T. obscuripennis , T. parishi , T. primus , T. puella , T. sarae , T. spatula sp. nov.

Adult: fore legs of male normal, remaining legs of male and all legs of female distorted and non-functional. Mesosternum: furcasternal plates approximating each other on basal half ( Fig. 54 View FIGURES 53 – 59 ) so furcasternal longitudinal impression narrow almost entirely, becoming wider only near posterior margin. Female pronotum with anterior ring well developed, at least 1/3 of total length of pronotum. Wings sexually dimorphic, all veins of female thickened; posterior margin of hind wings of female with a reticulated pattern of veinlets. Female fore wing without R3 and short intercalary vein before it (similar to Fig. 44 View FIGURES 44 – 52 ), in some large females one or both forewings may show 1 or 2 weak veins in this area, but their aspect is different (thinner, weaker) from the other longitudinal veins, as they are formed by the coalescence of few crossveins. Abdomen. Female abdominal sternum VIII with relatively large sublateral parastyli receptors, sockets opening towards the median line of the sternum ( Figs. 46, 51 View FIGURES 44 – 52 ). Male genitalia: abdominal sternum IX entire ( Fig. 57 View FIGURES 53 – 59 ); large parastyli present, curved dorsally, more than 5 times the length of their bases (pedestals); penes cylindrical, long and slender, completely divided ( Fig. 57 View FIGURES 53 – 59 ); apex of penes with a hooked (or rarely blunt) sclerotized spine ( Fig. 59 View FIGURES 53 – 59 ). Penial arms formed by a single transverse bar which is articulated to the posterior corners of tergum IX. Forceps two-segmented, basal segment short and small, with a ventral knob ( Figs. 57 View FIGURES 53 – 59 ); distal segment long, slender and clublike.

Nymph (for a complete characterization see Molineri 2008): head with prominent frontal ridge ( Fig. 96 View FIGURES 93 – 96 ); fronto-clypeal region expanded and concave, extending ventrally beyond mandibular tusks; mandibular tusks long with a large subapical denticle on inner margin ( Fig. 96 View FIGURES 93 – 96 ); maxilla with a basal finger like gill. Large filtering setae present on mouthparts and fore legs. Legs modified for burrowing with robust segments and flat tibiae. Fore tibia-tarsus with a prominent distal projection (dorsal projection 2/3 the length of the claw). Abdomen with vestigial unilamellate gill on segment I, gills on segment II–VII normal (large and bilamellate).

Eggs. Hemispherical, bowl-shaped ( Figs. 79–80 View FIGURES 73 – 80 ). Length, 355–450 µm; width, 290–375 µm. No polar caps or attachment structures; only one species ( T. spatula sp. nov.) with a long filament coiled along the main axis of the egg ( Figs. 79–80 View FIGURES 73 – 80 ). Chorion with microsculptures consisting of slightly elevated pentagonal and hexagonal cells, or shallow subcircular grooves.

Discussion and diagnosis. The adults of Tortopsis gen. nov. can be separated from its sister taxon Tortopus by: 1) mesofurcasternal plates approximating each other basally and medially, with inner margins diverging only on distal half ( Figs. 45 View FIGURES 44 – 52 , 54 View FIGURES 53 – 59 ); 2) male abdominal sternum entire ( Figs. 57 View FIGURES 53 – 59 , 73 View FIGURES 73 – 80 ); 3) parastyli very long, more than 5 times the length of pedestals ( Figs. 57–58 View FIGURES 53 – 59 ); 4) penes cylindrical at least basally and completely divided ( Fig. 57 View FIGURES 53 – 59 ); 5) female fore wing without R3 and short intercalary before it ( Fig. 44 View FIGURES 44 – 52 ), rarely expressed as 1 or 2 weak short veins; 6) parastyli receptors on abdominal sternum VIII relatively large and sublateral in position ( Figs. 46–52 View FIGURES 44 – 52 , 75, 78 View FIGURES 73 – 80 ), openings towards medial line. As mentioned previously, the characters distiguishing Tortopus and Tortopsis from the other genera of the family are listed in the phylogenetic section (apomorphies of node c). The coupling system in Tortopsis , as described in McCafferty & Bloodgood (1989), involves very well developed male parastyli and female sockets.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Ephemeroptera

Family

Polymitarcyidae

Loc

Tortopsis

Molineri, Carlos 2010
2010
Loc

Tortopus

McCafferty 1975: 489
1975
GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF