Baetis (Tenuibaetis) kaltenbachi Kluge & Srinivasan & Sivaruban & Barathy & Isack 2023, sp. n

Autor: Kluge, Nikita, Srinivasan, Pandiarajan, Sivaruban, T., Barathy, S., Isack, Rajasekaran
Rok vydání: 2023
Předmět:
DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.7889712
Popis: 5. Baetis (Tenuibaetis) kaltenbachi sp. n. (Figs 146–183) Etymology: This new species is named after Dr. Thomas Kaltenbach (UNIL, Department of Ecology and Evolution, Switzerland) for his incredible contribution to the systematics and phylogeny of Baetidae. Material examined (AMC). Holotype: L-S-I♁, INDIA, Tamil Nadu state, Madurai, river Vaigai, 12.XII.2022, coll. P. Srinivasan, R. Isack (AMC; new species register number 268). Paratypes: the same locality, and collectors, 28–31.VII.2021: 1 L-S-I♁, 1 L-S-I ♀, 15 larvae (AMC; new species register number 269). Larva. CUTICULAR COLORATION: Pronotum with brown and colorless areas, with sigilla lighter than background; mesonotum with brown and colorless areas; fore protoptera colored with yellowish (Fig. 149). Thoracic pleura brownish, sterna colorless. Legs mostly colorless, tarsus with outer side brownish (Figs 150–152). Abdominal terga with contrasting brown and colorless areas; terga IV – V mostly colorless, with pair of brown maculae submedially; terga IX –X mostly colorless (Figs 146–148). Caudalii uniformly colorless. HYPODERMAL COLORATION: Abdominal terga with reddish or yellowish markings visible through colorless areas of cuticle (Figs 146–147). SHAPE AND SETATION: Labrum of medium proportions (Figs 154–155). Labium— Figs 156–158. Hind protoptera present (as in Fig. 40). Stout two-channel setae forming row along outer side of femur (including two subapical setae) elongate, blunt, distally widened and flattened (Fig. 165–166). Stout setae on anterior side of femur two-channel, varying from long to short (Figs 165, 167). On each leg, stout setae on outer side of tibia pseudo-bifurcate; stout setae along patella-tibial suture partly pseudo-bifurcate, partly two-channel (Figs 163–164). Denticles on posterior margins of all terga I–X short and blunt (Fig. 159). Denticles on posterior margin of sternum bluntly triangular.Tergalius I much smaller than others (Fig. 148). Paracercus significantly smaller than cerci. Subimago. CUTICULAR COLORATION: Head colorless, antennae brown. Pronotum colorless. Mesonotum with ochre, light brownish and dark brown areas (Fig. 177) Thoracic pleura and sterna with light brownish and dark brown areas (as in Fig. 215). Legs with femora lighter, tibiae and tarsi darker (Figs 175–176). Abdominal terga I– VIII medially nearly colorless, laterally diffusively darkened; terga IX –X entirely light (Fig. 172). HYPODERMAL COLORATION: As in imago. Imago, male (Figs 169–170). Head ochre. Antennae ochre. Turbinate eyes with facetted surface red, stem ochre with orange. Pronotum ochre with reddish maculae, prosternum whitish with reddish. Mesonotum mostly ochre, mesopleura ochre with reddish markings, mesosternum whitish with furcasternal protuberances gray-brown. Forewing with membrane colorless, veins ochre; pterostigma with few oblique cross veins and disconnected vein fragments. Hind wing full-sized, colorless, with short and non-hooked costal projection, with 2 longitudinal veins (Fig. 178). Legs ochre with diffusive light reddish marking on distal part of femur (Figs 169, 173–174). Middle and hind tarsi with 2 apical spines (on 1st+2nd and 3rd segments).Abdominal terga I– IV and IX –X mostly whitish, terga V – VIII mostly brown; terga II – III and V – VIII with reddish-brown maculae laterally; all terga I–X with reddish or brown band bordering posterior margin and not reaching lateral margins (Fig. 169). Abdominal sterna mostly whitish, with gray-brown lateral areas, most extensive on sternum VIII and least extensive on sternum IV (Fig. 170). Cerci ochre. Gonostyli ochre; 1st segment relatively narrow, nearly parallel-sided; 3rd (terminal) segment short and truncate (Figs 181–183). Imago, female (Fig. 171). Coloration of head and thorax similar to that of male. Abdominal terga ochre, with reddish-brown lateral maculae and band bordering posterior margin. Hind wing narrower than in male (Fig. 179). All tarsi with 2 apical spines (fore tarsus on 2nd and 3rd segments, middle and hind tarsi on 1st+2nd and 3rd segments). Dimension. Forewing length 4 mm. Distribution. Southern India. Comparison. The new species differs from other species by peculiar hypodermal coloration of male imaginal abdomen, which is sharply different on terga II–III, IV, V–VIII and IX–X (Fig. 169).
Published as part of Kluge, Nikita, Srinivasan, Pandiarajan, Sivaruban, T., Barathy, S. & Isack, Rajasekaran, 2023, Contribution to the knowledge of the subgenus Tenuibaetis Kang & Yang 1994 (Ephemeroptera, Baetidae, Baetis s. l.), pp. 201-258 in Zootaxa 5277 (2) on pages 231-237, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5277.2.1, http://zenodo.org/record/7889695
Databáze: OpenAIRE