Macrorrhinia ochrella ( Barnes and McDunnough, 1913 )

Hayden, James E. & Landry, Jean-François, 2020, Arcola malloi (Pastrana), the alligatorweed stemborer, a new synonym of Macrorrhinia endonephele (Hampson) (Lepidoptera: Pyralidae: Phycitinae), Insecta Mundi 2020 (768), pp. 1-25 : 6-7

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.5353606

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:FA113144-2E1D-4492-963F-FB766029834F

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03995710-551E-141F-FF02-F9FAD715F950

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Macrorrhinia ochrella ( Barnes and McDunnough, 1913 )
status

 

Macrorrhinia ochrella ( Barnes and McDunnough, 1913)

Fig. 8–10 View Figures 2–11 , 14–15 View Figures 12–15 , 23–24 View Figures 20–27 , 32–33 View Figures 28–36 , 40–42 View Figures 37–45 , 48 View Figures 46–49 , 59–60 View Figures 59–61 , 62–67 View Figures 62–67 , 69 View Figures 68–73

Divitiaca ochrella Barnes and McDunnough 1913: 183 View in CoL .

Divitiaca simulella Barnes and McDunnough 1913: 183 View in CoL ; synonymized by Neunzig 2003: 266.

Diagnosis. The forewing length is 4.5–6.5 mm. The maculation ( Fig. 8–10 View Figures 2–11 ) is cream with scattered black scales; good specimens have faint pink streaks on the anal fold in the basal area and along the radial veins. The gnathos ( Fig. 32–33 View Figures 28–36 ) has a wide base in sagittal view. The dilated section of the ductus bursae ( Fig. 59–60 View Figures 59–61 ) is reduced and looks like a boot, and it has one major row of spines on the posterior side and, in some specimens, a row of smaller spines on the anterior side ( Fig. 62–67 View Figures 62–67 ). The posterior margin of the antrum ( Fig. 69 View Figures 68–73 ) is transverse and slightly convex or sinuate with slender lateral projections that are considerably wider than the ductus bursae.

Material examined. USA, FLORIDA, Broward Co.: 1 male (2013), MGCL slide 1289 ; Monroe Co.: 18 (1987, 1988, 1990, 1992, 1994–1996, 2019), MGCL slides 5326, 5742, 5743, 5753–5756 ; Everglades : 1 female (1961), slide PYR 2197 ( CNC) .

Divitiaca ochrella syntypes ( USNM): There are two syntypes in the USNM, one male and one female, with red-bordered labels inscribed “ Divitiaca ochrella B. & McD Type [sex symbol]” in McDunnough’s handwriting, with collecting data matching the description. The male was illustrated in Barnes and McDunnough (1913, plate I, figure 3), and the genitalia later dissected by Heinrich (genitalia and wings on separate slides). The female was undissected. Because the male and the female are similarly inscribed as “Type” and the female genitalia of Macrorrhinia afford better specific differences, we selected the female for the lectotype and dissected it.

Divitiaca ochrella lectotype female, here designated, labelled: “Everglade [sic], Florida ” ; “Apr 8-15”; Divitiaca ochrella B. & McD Type ♀ ” ; “Barnes Collection” [red-bordered and lined]; “Genitalia slide by JF Landry ♀ USNM 130,222 View Materials ” [green] ; “ LECTOTYPE ♀ Divitiaca ochrella Barnes & McD. by J.-F. Landry 2019” [orange] ; specimen # USNMENT00657700 ( USNM).

One paralectotype ♂, labelled as lectotype, additional label “Photograph Pl. 1 No. 3” [pale blue], slide USNM 101842, specimen # USNMENT00657701.

One male from Everglade [sic] from the Barnes Collection dated “Apr 16-23” is not a syntype (slide USNM 144171, specimen # USNMENT00657702).

Divitiaca simulella syntypes ( USNM): as for D. ochrella , there is a pair of USNM syntypes bearing the inscription “Type”, as well as a third male specimen labelled as “cotype”, all on red-bordered labels in McDunnough’s hand. The male “type” was illustrated in Barnes and McDunnough (1913, plate I, figure 6) and its genitalia later dissected by Heinrich. The female “type” and the cotype were undissected. For the same reason as D. ochrella , we selected the female for lectotype and dissected it.

Divitiaca simulella lectotype female, here designated, labelled: “Everglade [sic], Florida ” ; “Apr 8-15”; Divitiaca simulella B. & McD Type ♀ ” ; “Barnes Collection” [red-bordered and lined]; “Genitalia slide by JF Landry ♀ USNM 130,223 View Materials ” [green] ; “ LECTOTYPE ♀ Divitiaca simulella Barnes & McD. by J.-F. Landry 2019” [orange], specimen # USNMENT00657704 ( USNM) .

One paralectotype male, labelled as lectotype, additional label “Photograph Pl. 1 No. 6” [pale blue]; slide USNM 101844 View Materials , specimen # USNMENT00657703. One paralectotype male, labelled as lectotype except for the word “Cotype”, slide USNM 144162 View Materials , specimen # USNMENT00657705 .

Additional ♂ specimen: Everglade [sic], Apr. 10, ’12; slide USNM 144172 View Materials , specimen # USN- MENT00657706 ; a white label “ Divitiaca simulella B & McD” is by a different hand.

Comments. The slight difference in size and coloration between M. ochrella and M. simulella led Heinrich (1956) to doubt that they were different species, nevertheless he maintained them separate. He did not illustrate the genitalia of M. simulella citing their close similarity to those of M. ochrella . Neunzig (2003) judged them to be conspecific on account of finding no significant difference and synonymized them. We observed that the female genitalia of the two lectotypes, undissected prior to the present study, differed slightly in the shape of the corpus bursae (a possible artefact of stretching), the spination at the anterior end of the ductus bursae near its inception into the corpus bursae (this area is crumpled in the M. ochrella lectotype slide so difficult to compare), the size of the ostium bursae (proportionally wider in M. ochrella ) and the extent of the zone of microtrichia of the sinus vaginalis (more extensive in M. ochrella ). Recently observed specimens from Monroe Co., Florida showed variation in female genitalia similar in extent to intraspecific variation exhibited by M. endonephele . We conclude that this supports maintaining their synonymic status.

CNC

Canadian National Collection of Insects, Arachnids, and Nematodes

USNM

Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Lepidoptera

Family

Pyralidae

Genus

Macrorrhinia

Loc

Macrorrhinia ochrella ( Barnes and McDunnough, 1913 )

Hayden, James E. & Landry, Jean-François 2020
2020
Loc

Divitiaca ochrella

Barnes, W. M. & J. H. McDunnough 1913: 183
1913
Loc

Divitiaca simulella

Neunzig, H. H. 2003: 266
Barnes, W. M. & J. H. McDunnough 1913: 183
1913
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