Meganola tetrodon (de Joannis, 1928)

Cha, Yeong-Bin, László, Gyula M., Bayarsaikhan, Ulziijargal, Ko, Jae-Ho, Lee, Tak-Gi, Jang, Chang-Moon, Kim, Hanul, Kim, Jeong-Nam & Bae, Yang-Seop, 2021, Two new species and a new record of the genus Meganola Dyar, 1898 (Lepidoptera, Nolidae, Nolinae) from Laos, Zootaxa 5032 (3), pp. 423-430 : 426

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5032.3.7

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:E4206D08-996B-4861-8B4A-ADFA7AA6B9B6

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03DD87E8-FF9A-1250-9990-FBC0FCF232FE

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Meganola tetrodon (de Joannis, 1928)
status

 

Meganola tetrodon (de Joannis, 1928)

( Figures 5 View FIGURES 1–5 , 10 View FIGURES 6–10 )

Nola tetrodon de Joannis, 1928 , Bulletin de la Société Entomologique de France 97: 250. TL: [North Vietnam] Tonkin, Hoàng Su Phì. HT: male in MNHN, Paris.

Meganola yakovlevi László, Ronkay & Witt, 2010 View in CoL , Esperiana View in CoL 15: 44. TL: Thailand.

Meganola tetrodon: László, Ronkay & Ronkay, 2015 , Zootaxa 4052(3): 266; G. László, 2016, Ph.D. thesis: 59.

Diagnosis. Adult ( Figure 5a, b View FIGURES 1–5 ). The species belongs to the Meganola strigivena species-group sharing the distinctive wing pattern expressed by the excessively zig-zagged medial line and the strongly curved postmedial line running close to the medial line. Although most of the taxa of the species group display confusingly similar wing patterns, M. tetrodon , is well distinguished by the conspicuously white frons and vertex and the grayish-white patagium irrotated with olive scales; these characters are considerably darker in all other members of the species-group. In addition, the terminal line of M. tetrodon is interrupted, represented by a row of dark dashes on the terminal end of each vein, while the other congeners have continuous terminal lines. In the male genitalia ( Figure 10a View FIGURES 6–10 ), M. tetrodon has the shortest, apically rounded, finger-shaped harpe, which is considerably longer and pointed in the allied species; in addition, its aedeagus is markedly longer than that of the congeners. The 8 th tergite ( Figure 10b View FIGURES 6–10 ) has much shorter sclerotized processes than in its congeners; the 8 th sternite ( Figure 10b View FIGURES 6–10 ) bears two thumb-like, weakly sclerotized posterior plates which are shorter, triangular in the related taxa.

Female specimens were not available for this study. However, female genitalia was described and illustrated by László et al. (2010).

Material examined. 1♂, Laos, Xiengkhouang Province , Ban Tha (N19°43'31.40'', E103°35'22.73'' Alt.: 1,212m), 02. IX. 2018 (Bae Y.S., Na S.M., Lee D.J., Ko J.H., Lee T.G., Cha Y.B., Jang C.M.), genitalia slide No. INU-9466 (INU) GoogleMaps .

Distribution. Laos (Xiengkhouang Province), Northern Thailand, North Vietnam.

Remark. This is the first record of the species from Laos.

T

Tavera, Department of Geology and Geophysics

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Lepidoptera

Family

Nolidae

Genus

Meganola

Loc

Meganola tetrodon (de Joannis, 1928)

Cha, Yeong-Bin, László, Gyula M., Bayarsaikhan, Ulziijargal, Ko, Jae-Ho, Lee, Tak-Gi, Jang, Chang-Moon, Kim, Hanul, Kim, Jeong-Nam & Bae, Yang-Seop 2021
2021
Loc

Meganola tetrodon: László, Ronkay & Ronkay, 2015

: Laszlo, Ronkay & Ronkay 2015
2015
Loc

Meganola yakovlevi László, Ronkay & Witt, 2010

Laszlo, Ronkay & Witt 2010
2010
Loc

Esperiana

Bourguignat 1877
1877
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