Anacroneuria piranga, Castillo-Velásquez & Gonçalves & Correia & Viana & Rippel & Bonfá-Neto & Sperber & Salles, 2023
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5360.3.4 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:57FC0A0F-ABA4-404E-BC12-E5B3316A56E2 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10164630 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/4E67E575-FF9F-FFA3-FF59-659FFEE6EE85 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Anacroneuria piranga |
status |
sp. nov. |
Anacroneuria piranga sp. nov. Castillo-Velásquez, Gonçalves & Salles
Fig. 5A–G View FIGURE 5 , 6 View FIGURE 6 urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:9D139905-969E-4DA2-8179-B1058243D85B
Male adult. Habitus. Forewing length 8–10 mm. General color brown in dorsal view and amber in ventral view ( Fig. 5A View FIGURE 5 ). Head amber, postfrontal area, clypeus and frons brown, M-line amber. Antennae brown, with yellow outer margin on the scape, pedicel, and the first eight to nine flagellomeres. Palpi brown. Pronotum brown, with two longitudinal light bands and uneven light rugosities ( Fig. 5B View FIGURE 5 ). Wings with membrane brown, except for pale marks, one close to the forewing base, other at the joint of ScP and RA on fore and hindwings; veins dark brown ( Fig. 5C View FIGURE 5 ). Legs brown; hind femur with a subbasal light yellow band; tibiae of all legs amber at base. Thorax amber with sternal sulci brown. Abdominal terga and sterna amber, sternum IX uniformly covered with bristles. Cerci with articles dark brown at base, progressively changing to a bicolor (apex brown, amber) towards the middle; apex of cerci broken ( Fig. 5D View FIGURE 5 ). Hammer roundly tapered and slightly flattened at the apex ( Fig. 5D View FIGURE 5 ). Penial armature in ventral view ( Fig. 5E View FIGURE 5 ) with a pair of membranous subapical vesicles and two flattened and slightly curved hooks that cross each other forming an “x” with acute apices; in dorsal view ( Fig. 5F View FIGURE 5 ), penial armature bottle-shaped, apex ending in two notches and bottleneck-shaped base of hooks corrugated; keel, in lateral view ( Fig. 5G View FIGURE 5 ), not curved, flattened and with the apex pointed.
Female adult. Unknown.
Nymph. Unknown.
Remarks. The color of the adult resembles those of several species of the genus. The penial armature of A. piranga sp. nov., in lateral view, resembles A. annulicauda Stark & Kondratieff, 2004 , but differs in the shape of the keel. In the new species, the keel is not curved but flattened, with the apex pointed. In A. annulicauda , it is slightly rounded at the apex, not pointed. The shape of the hooks, on the other hand, is more similar to A. atrifrons Klapálek, 1922 , but are thinner in the new species and lack teeth.
Etymology. The specific name makes reference to the river where the specimens were collected. The term “Piranga”, means red, and comes from Tupi, the original language of several Brazilian native tribes ( Carvalho 1987).
Habitat. The sampling site is located approximately 3 km west downstream from the Brecha Hydroelectric Plant in an area with native riparian vegetation on the riverbank, with discontinuous stretches due to anthropic intervention. The river has poorly developed rapids and a greenish color on the bottom, which is covered by mats of algae and slime, and a combination of stones and gravel; aquatic vegetation is absent ( Fig. 6 View FIGURE 6 ).
Material examined. Holotype ♂: BRA, MG, Guaraciaba , Piranga River, 20°32’46.30”S, 42°59’25.25”W, 14–15.i. 2022, 526 m a.s.l., Pennsylvania trap, A.Viana, P. Bonfá & P. Rodrigues, ( PL00187 ) GoogleMaps . Paratype one ♁: same data as holotype, ( PL00188 ) GoogleMaps .
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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