9. Prostoia completa (Walker, 1852)
Central Forestfly
http://lsid.speciesfile.org/urn:lsid: Plecoptera .speciesfile.org:TaxonName:6101
(Figs. 5, 61‒68)
Nemoura completa Walker 1852:191 . Holotype male (British Natural History Museum), Nova Scotia, Canada
Nemoura glabra (in part): Claassen, 1923:281. Syn. Illies, 1966:221
Nemoura glabra (in part): Needham and Claassen, 1925:202
Nemoura completa: Ricker, 1938:133
Nemoura completa: Claassen, 1940:53
Nemoura completa: Harden & Mickel, 1952:16
Nemoura (Prostoia) completa: Ricker, 1952:49
Prostoia completa: Illies, 1966:221
Nemoura (Prostoia) completa: Harper & Hynes, 1971:1138
Prostoia completa: Zwick, 1973:346
Nemoura (Prostoia) completa: Hitchcock, 1974:97
Prostoia completa: Grubbs et al., 2014:15
Prostoia completa: Stark, 2017:214
Distribution. Canada: NB, NS, NF, ON, PE, PQ. USA: AL, AR, DE, GA, IA, IL, IN, KY, MA, MD, ME, MI, MN, MO, MS, NC, NY, OH, OK, PA, SC, TN, VA, WI, WV (DeWalt et al. 2022)
Male. Macropterous.Body length 4.1–5.9 mm, forewing length 6.0– 7.2 mm (n= 7). Gills absent.Cerci simple and unmodified (Figs. 61–62). Paraprocts with lightly sclerotized, undivided lobes. Epiproct ventral sclerite sclerotized throughout length, narrow in both dorsal and lateral profiles, and fully recurved over abdomen (Figs. 61–63); base parallel-sided for ca. ⅓ of length (Figs. 61, 66), tip slightly deflected upward and subtruncate apically (Figs. 64–65); dorsal sclerite reduced to lateral arms in basal area (Figs. 66–67), which are short and sickle-shaped (Fig. 67).
Female. Macropterous. Body length 4.9–7.6 mm, forewing length 6.7–7.5 mm (n = 9). Gills absent. Cerci simple and unmodified. The 7 th and 8 th sterna fused medially (Fig. 68); the 8 th sternum is modified slightly as a subgenital plate, with faint medial excavation and scarcely developed posterolateral corners (Fig. 68).
Larva. Described by Harper & Hynes (1971). Stewart & Stark (2002) provided a full habitus illustration. Partial illustrations are also available in Stark (2017).
Comments. Prostoia completa is a widely distributed species in the eastern US and southeastern Canada plus westward across the Mississippi River to Iowa and Minnesota (DeWalt et al. 2022). The Iowa specimens, however, require reexamination to be certain. Grubbs et al. (2014) proposed that the Interior Highland populations of P. completa from Arkansas, Missouri, and Oklahoma plus southern Illinois refer to P. ozarkensis . These two species are morphologically similar, exhibiting subtle differences with the epiproct dorsal and ventral sclerites. The females, however, cannot be differentiated morphologically.