Paratischeria guarani Diskus & Stonis, 2020

Stonis, Jonas R., Diskus, Arūnas, Remeikis, Andrius, Solis, M. Alma & Katinas, Liliana, 2020, Exotic-looking Neotropical Tischeriidae (Lepidoptera) and their host plants, ZooKeys 970, pp. 117-158 : 117

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.970.54801

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:EAAFFA3F-EB72-413E-9450-A0A9B7844F14

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/D3990BF8-93B3-4843-BEC8-A38F06888465

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:D3990BF8-93B3-4843-BEC8-A38F06888465

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Paratischeria guarani Diskus & Stonis
status

sp. nov.

Paratischeria guarani Diskus & Stonis sp. nov. Figs 22-31 View Figures 22–31 , 44 View Figures 44–49 , 45 View Figures 44–49 , 92-96 View Figures 92–97

Holotype.

male, pinned, with genitalia slide no. AD988. Labels: Paraguay, Departamento de Itapúa, Hohenau, 27°5'6"S, 55°40'22"W, elevation 115 m, mining larva on Elephantopus mollis Kunth, Asteraceae , 14 Feb 2019, field card no. 5293, A. Diškus (ZIN).

Diagnosis.

Externally, this new species can be confused with some other brightly colored species, including A. cornuata sp. nov. (described above) or Central American A. guatemalica Diškus & Stonis, and Ecuadorian A. bachariphaga Diškus & Stonis (see Stonis et al. 2019). However, these externally similar Astrotischeria species possess a well-developed dorsal lobe of valva, but all Paratischeria species have no dorsal lobe. In the male genitalia, the combination of very long and slender uncus and a laterally strongly thickened anellus distinguish Paratischeria guarani sp. nov. from all known congeneric species. The characters of the female genitalia are not informative, and, therefore, are of very limited use for species differentiation. This species is also distinctive because no other tischeriid species is known to feed on Elephantopus mollis Kunth, Asteraceae .

Description.

Male (Fig. 44 View Figures 44–49 ). Forewing length 2.8-3.1 mm; wingspan 6.1-6.8 mm (n = 4). Head: frons ochre-grey, pecten pale ochre; frontal tuft glossy grey proximally, pale ochre distally; collar ochre-grey; antenna slightly longer than one half length of forewing; flagellum greyish cream, irregularly annulated with dark grey scales. Tegula and thorax grey-ochre. Forewing variable, pale ochre irregularly speckled with dark grey, apically with black scales; fringe dark grey, with fringe indistinctive or absent; forewing underside brown-black, without spots or androconia. Hindwing grey on upper side and underside, without androconia; fringe grey. Legs grey on upper side, ochre cream on underside. Abdomen black on upper side, glossy ochre with some dark brown scales on underside; genital plates pale ochre to pale grey; anal tufts grey-ochre.

Male genitalia (Figs 92-94 View Figures 92–97 ) with capsule 760 µm long, 315 µm wide. Uncus (Fig. 93 View Figures 92–97 ) with two very long and slender lateral lobes. Socii small, paired, membranous. Valva (Fig. 92 View Figures 92–97 ) ca. 615 µm long. Anellus strongly thickened laterally, constricted at the middle (Fig. 92 View Figures 92–97 ). Vinculum small, rounded distally (Fig. 92 View Figures 92–97 ). Phallus ca. 670 µm long, apically bifid (Fig. 94 View Figures 92–97 ).

Female (Fig. 45 View Figures 44–49 ). Forewing length 3.0-3.3 mm; wingspan 6.5-7.1 mm (n = 2). Similar to male, but sometimes darker, with bright ochre thorax and forewing more intensively speckled with black scales. Abdomen black, ochre only distally; ovipositor very short, but protruding. Otherwise, identical with male.

Female genitalia (Figs 95-97 View Figures 92–97 ) 680 µm long. Ovipositor lobes oval-shaped, covered with peg-like setae; second pair of ovipositor lobes small, with long setae (Fig. 96 View Figures 92–97 ). Anterior and posterior apophyses equal in length (Fig. 96 View Figures 92–97 ); prela comprised of three pairs of rod-like projections (Fig. 96 View Figures 92–97 ). Corpus bursae very slender, with long proximal part and small main body without pectination (Fig. 95 View Figures 92–97 ). Ductus spermathecae with 7-8 large coils (Fig. 97 View Figures 92–97 ).

Bionomics

(Figs 22-31 View Figures 22–31 ). Host plant is Elephantopus mollis Kunth, Asteraceae (Figs 23-27 View Figures 22–31 ). Larvae mine leaves in February. Larva greenish white, with dark green intestine and brown head. The blotch-like mine (Figs 28-31 View Figures 22–31 ) is irregular, but often elongated, pale brown or pale green, without frass. Pupation in a round nidus. Adults occur in March.

Distribution.

This species is known from a single locality in Paraguay, Departamento de Itapúa, Hohenau (Fig. 22 View Figures 22–31 ), at the elevation of 115 m, but the host plant has a much wider distribution (see Discussion).

Etymology.

This species is named after the Guaraní, indigenous people of South America, living in present-day Paraguay between the Uruguay River and lower Paraguay River.

Other material examined.

5 ♂, 2 ♀, paratypes: Paraquay, Departamento de Itapúa, Hohenau, 27°5'6"S, 55°40'22"W, elevation 115 m, mining larvae on Elephantopus mollis Kunth, Asteraceae , 14 Feb 2019, field card no. 5293, A. Diškus, genitalia slide nos AD986♂ (from adult in pupal skin, no pinned moth preserved), AD998♂, AD987♀ (ZIN).