Bradina fusoidea Guo & Du, 2023

Guo, Jia-Ming & Du, Xi-Cui, 2023, Five new species of Bradina Lederer (Lepidoptera, Crambidae) from China, with remarks on the morphology of the genus, ZooKeys 1158, pp. 49-67 : 49

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1158.99411

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:A3AD0A1D-9178-4B91-BC2C-0C1A1AC65312

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/CEACA386-3CD0-4FFF-85F5-1140F4B86FEF

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:CEACA386-3CD0-4FFF-85F5-1140F4B86FEF

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Bradina fusoidea Guo & Du
status

sp. nov.

Bradina fusoidea Guo & Du sp. nov.

Figs 2B View Figure 2 , 3F-K View Figure 3

Type material.

Holotype, ♂ China: Sichuan Prov., Qingcheng Mountain, Dujiangyan city, alt. 860 m, 30°92'N, 103°50'E, 22 July 2021, Shuai Yu, Xiao-Ju Zhu, Di Zhang leg. (NKU), genitalia slide no. GJM21117. Paratypes. China: Sichuan Prov., 6 ♂♂, 1 ♀, other same data as holotype (NKU), genitalia slide no.: GJM21112 ♂, GJM21118 ♀; 1 ♂, Emei Mountain, Leshan City, alt. 847 m, 22 July 2021, Shuai Yu, Xiao-Ju Zhu, Di Zhang leg. (NKU), genitalia slide no.: GJM21113; Guangdong Prov., 2 ♂♂, 1 ♀, Heishiding Nature Reserve, Fengkai County, Zhaoqing City, 14-16 June 2009, Feng-Xia He leg., genitalia slide no.: GJM21114 ♂, GJM21180 ♀.

Diagnosis.

This species is similar to B. megesalis . The difference in appearance is that the distance between discoidal stigma and postmedial line on forewing of this species is longer than that of B. megesalis ; the postmedial line and terminal margin of forewing is obviously unparallel in this species, while is nearly parallel in the latter. It also can be distinguished by the setal cluster near middle of sacculus being shorter than that of the latter, phallus with one fusiform cornutus and one subcircular cornutus (two spear-like cornuti in B. megesalis ), posterior ductus bursae inflated but not forming irregular protrusion as in B. megesalis , plus subposterior section of ductus bursae widened along half of ductus length, a feature that is absent in B. megesalis .

Description.

Adult (Fig. 2B View Figure 2 ). Wingspan 31.0-33.0 mm, forewing length 15.0-16.0 mm. Frons white, except brown on frontal base and middle near vertex. Vertex white. Antenna yellow, with pale brown ring dorsally; ventral cilia c. half-length of flagellomere diameter of male. Labial palpus with basal two thirds white, black-brown distally. Maxillary palpus black-brown. Patagium yellowish white. Tegula pale brown. Thorax pale brown dorsally, white ventrally. Wings pale brown, gradually darkened to terminal; stigmata and lines dark brown. Forewing black-brown along basal half of costa; orbicular stigma very small; discoidal stigma crescent; postmedial line at c. two thirds of wing, straight and unparallel to terminal margin. Hindwing with postmedial line straight, towards to tornus, only middle part obvious. Cilia pale brown, with a white line at base, except yellowish white on inner margin of the hindwing. Legs pale yellow. Front and middle tibiae brown; hind tibia with outer middle spurs c. two thirds length of inner spurs. Abdomen with basal half pale brown and distal half dark brown dorsally, each segment pale terminally; yellowish white ventrally.

Male genitalia (Fig. 3F-H View Figure 3 ). Valva distally gradually narrowed and bearing dense long setae; costa arched near middle and accompanied by a cluster of long curved setae; sacculus gradually narrowed to apex, with a cluster of long setae near middle. Phallus with one fusiform cornutus medially, composed of short and blunt spines, c. one third length of phallus, and one subcircular sclerotized cornutus posteriorly.

Female genitalia (Fig. 3I-K View Figure 3 ). Antrum broad. Posterior ductus bursae inflated and thorny, adjoined posteriorly by colliculum, posterior half inflated, weakly sclerotized, narrowed medially, then gradually widened to corpus bursae. Corpus bursae nearly rounded, with dense tiny spines inside, transverse signum crescent and densely spinose.

Etymology.

The specific name is derived from the Latin fusoideus (meaning ‘fusiform’), in reference to a fusiform cornutus.

Distribution.

China (Guangdong, Sichuan).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Lepidoptera

Family

Crambidae

Genus

Bradina