Abstract
The egg structures of five antarctoperlarian species – Stenoperla prasina of Eustheniidae; Austroperla cyrene of Austroperlidae; and Zelandobius truncus, Megaleptoperla grandis, and Acroperla trivacuata of Gripopterygidae, were examined in detail, and the groundplan of the egg structure was considered within the representative lineages of Antarctoperlaria and Plecoptera. The flattened egg shape and the circular arrangement of micropyles along the equator are regarded as potential autapomorphies for not only Eustheniidae but also for Eusthenioidea. Austroperlidae has eggs with thin, less-sclerotized chorion, a gelatinous layer on the surface, and micropyles roughly and randomly arranged along the equator. A significant ultrastructural difference between the attachment disc in Gripopterygidae and the anchor plate of arctoperlarian Systellognatha suggests that these structures were independently derived. The thin less-sclerotized chorion represents a groundplan feature in Plecoptera, along with micropyles arranged in a circle, including those circularly arranged along the equator of the egg. On the other hand, in contrast to previous understanding, the sclerotized hard chorion is regarded as a derived feature, having been independently acquired in each of Eustheniidae and Gripopterygidae of Antarctoperlaria and Systellognatha of Arctoperlaria.
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