Epacanthaclisis Okamoto, 1910

Ao, Weiguang, Wan, Xia & Wang, Xinli, 2010, Review of the genus Epacanthaclisis Okamoto, 1910 in China (Neuroptera: Myrmeleontidae), Zootaxa 2545, pp. 47-57 : 47-48

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.293879

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6197584

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C27AA22B-D42D-FF85-FF51-F8F8A157FD31

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Epacanthaclisis Okamoto, 1910
status

 

Epacanthaclisis Okamoto, 1910 View in CoL View at ENA

Epacanthaclisis Okamoto, 1910: 285 View in CoL . Type species: Acanthaclisis moiwanus ( Okamoto, 1905) (as Acanthaclisis moiwasana View in CoL [sic] Matsumura, 1910), by original designation. Synomymized by Stange (2004: 87).

Epicanthaclisis Banks 1940: 194; Yang 1987: 212. Misspelling. Synonymized by Stange (2004: 87). Botuleon Yang, 1986: 423 . Type species: Botuleon maculosus Yang ; by original designation. Synonymized by Stange (2004: 87).

Distribution. Afghanistan, Kazakhstan, Kirghizstan, Tadzhikistan, China, Japan.

Diagnosis. Bifurcation of Rs opposite or before cubital fork on wings; costal area of forewing biareolate, that of hindwing with single row of cells; 4–6 presectoral crossveins in forewing, 1–2 (usually 2) presectoral crossveins in hindwing. Female: lateral gonapophysis large, with digging setae; posterior gonapophysis smaller than anterior gonapophysis or absent. Male: pilula axillaris present; some species male with abdominal hair-pencils or tuft on IV–VI segments; genitalia without mediuncus between a pair of parameres.

Remarks. Krivokhatsky (1998) described the male genitalia of Epacanthaclisis with the mediuncus situated between the pair of parameres, but the figures of male genitalia by Krivokhatsky were not labeled. We could not find the mediuncus on these figures. So we speculate that the sclerite named mediuncus by Krivokhatsky is not homologous with the mediuncus defined by Aspöck et al. (1980). Male of some species with hair-pencils or tuft, usually situated on IV–VI abdominal segments; presumed functions of these structures could be stridulation or sex pheromone volatilization ( Krivokhatsky, 1998) and may play an important role in courtship ( New, 1981).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Neuroptera

Family

Myrmeleontidae

Loc

Epacanthaclisis Okamoto, 1910

Ao, Weiguang, Wan, Xia & Wang, Xinli 2010
2010
Loc

Epacanthaclisis

Stange 2004: 87
Okamoto 1910: 285
1910
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