Barsine hypoprepioides (Walker, 1862)

Volynkin, Anton V., Černý, Karel & Huang, Si-Yao, 2019, A review of the Barsine hypoprepioides (Walker, 1862) species-group, with descriptions of fifteen new species and a new subspecies (Lepidoptera, Erebidae, Arctiinae), Zootaxa 4618 (1), pp. 1-82 : 5-6

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4618.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:935EC636-8824-4D4A-8F70-62A47A918D8E

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5933762

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/039B3376-6F6D-C94A-49E1-B0E062979336

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Barsine hypoprepioides
status

 

The Barsine hypoprepioides View in CoL species-group

Description. Adults ( Fig. 1 View FIGURES 1–3 ). Small or medium-sized moths. Male antennae ciliate, female antennae filiform. Body and wing coloration varies from creamy white to yellowish white, rarely pale yellow ( B. conformis , B. kuatunensis and B. takamukui ), bright yellow ( B. melanovena and B. karenkensis wushipheri ) or orange ( B. salamandra ). Forewing pattern black or fuscous and consists of subbasal spot, three elongated antemedial spots, three transverse lines (antemedial, medial and postmedial, which may be interrupted), discal spot, longitudinal strokes on veins in subterminal area of wing, and thin terminal line. Sometimes forewing pattern elements are fused into broad black or dark brown shades (in B. salamandra , B. melanovena , B. persephone , B. asotoida , and B. specialis ). Forewing cilia from blackish and fuscous to spotted and white. Hindwing pattern diffuse and consists of medial and subterminal transverse lines (sometimes may be absent) and longitudinal strokes of veins in subterminal area. Sometimes hindwing pattern is completely absent ( B. salakia ). Hindwing cilia as hindwing ground color or blackish. In B. specialis , hindwings monotonous dark brown. Male genitalia ( Fig. 2 View FIGURES 1–3 ). Uncus elongated, narrow, laterally flattened, slightly curved, apically pointed. Tuba analis broad, membranous; scaphium thin, weakly sclerotized; subscaphium as broad setose area. Tegumen short and medium broad; juxta medium broad, with large conical medial process (sometimes absent); vinculum robust, U- or V-like. Valva elongated; costa broad, well sclerotized; medial costal process at broad base, moderately long, distally narrowed, apically pointed tapered; distal costal process dorsally directed; distal lobe of valva well developed, usually broad; sacculus well sclerotized, setose, with setose or (rarely) strongly dentate dorsal margin; distal saccular process present, varies in length and shape in different species. Aedeagus elongated and medium broad, slightly curved or almost straight; vesica broad, globular, with several short but broad diverticula armed with fields of granulation or clusters of small, but robust cornuti; basal plate of vesica ejaculatorius short, trigonal. Female genitalia ( Fig. 3 View FIGURES 1–3 ). Papillae anales broad, rectangular with rounded edges; apophyses anteriores and posteriores long and thin. Postvaginal plate moderately sclerotized, small, sometimes broad; ostium bursae broad; ductus bursae with large, heavily sclerotized antrum and short membranous anterior part. Corpus bursae sack-like, with dense spinulose scobination and signum with dentate surface (in some species absent); appendix bursae conical, elongated, sometimes curved, with dense spinulose scobination, situated latero-posteriorly.

Remark. The species-group is related to B. marginis ( Fang, 1991) , comb. nov. ( Figs 271, 272 View FIGURES 271–280 , 291 View FIGURES 291–294 , 299 View FIGURES 299–303 ), the B. callida ( Fang, 1991) B. mesortha ( Hampson, 1898) species pair ( Figs 273–280 View FIGURES 271–280 , 292, 293 View FIGURES 291–294 , 300, 301 View FIGURES 299–303 ), B. compar ( Fang, 1991) ( Figs 281, 282 View FIGURES 281–290 , 294 View FIGURES 291–294 , 302 View FIGURES 299–303 ), B. honbaensis Dubatolov & Bucsek 2013 ( Figs 283–287 View FIGURES 281–290 , 295–297 View FIGURES 295–298 , 303 View FIGURES 299–303 ), B. dentata ( Wileman, 1910) , comb. nov. ( Figs 288–290 View FIGURES 281–290 , 298 View FIGURES 295–298 ) and B. cernyi Volynkin, 2018 (illustrated by Volynkin (2018)) clearly forming six separated species-groups. However, members of the Barsine hypoprepioides speciesgroup can be easily distinguished from those related groups by their whitish or yellow wing coloration (orange or red in other species ( Figs 271–290 View FIGURES 271–280 View FIGURES 281–290 )) and the vesica structure ( Figs 291–298 View FIGURES 291–294 View FIGURES 295–298 ).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Lepidoptera

Family

Erebidae

Genus

Barsine

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