Laberlia apusorum Yakovlev, Naydenov, Penco, 2020

Yakovlev, Roman V., Naydenov, Artem E. & Penco, Fernando C., 2020, New data on Neotropical Carpenter Moths of Subfamily Hypoptinae Neumoegen & Dyar, 1894 (Lepidoptera: Cossidae). III. Laberlia - a new genus from Northern and Central Andean Mountains, Ecologica Montenegrina 38, pp. 18-24 : 22-23

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.37828/em.2020.38.4

publication LSID

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:175934B3-66A3-445E-9C1B-1B6A010B7842

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/FC3D87C4-1354-FFF7-FF44-A006851CFE28

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Laberlia apusorum Yakovlev, Naydenov, Penco
status

sp. nov.

3. Laberlia apusorum Yakovlev, Naydenov, Penco sp. nov.

( Figs 4 View Figures 1−4 , 7−8 View Figures 5−7 View Figure 8 )

Material examined. Holotype (♂), Peru, La Libertad, Pataz prov. , S of Tayabamba, 3840 m, 08°23.18 ' S 77°16.39 ' W, 17.XII.2016, leg. V. Sinjaev (Genital preparation №331 coll. Naydenov A.E.) ( ZISP). GoogleMaps

Description. Length of fore wing 21 mm. Fore wing short, light-grey, with bright contrast light-brown pattern: row of round dots along costal edge, two big spots at root area, two elongated transverse spots postdiscally (in radial and cubital areas), torn wide hourglass-shaped band submarginally. Hind wing white, semi-transparent, with small round brown spot in medial-basal area, brown stroke along costal edge, grey longitudinal stroke between Sc and Rs. Fringe on all wings mottled, light-brown at veins, light-yellow between veins.

Male genitalia. Uncus long, basally robust, clavately extended in distal third, apically sharp; tegumen robust; gnathos arms not fused, of medium length, gradually narrowing to apex; valve large, apically semicircular; costal edge basally with large long harpe (1/5 longer than uncus) gradually narrowing from base to apex; juxta scaphoid, with pair of short thin lateral processes; saccus small, tapered, phallus shorter than valve, thin, strongly curved in medium third, vesica aperture in dorso-apical position, about ¼ of phallus in length, vesica without cornuti.

Female genitalia. Unknown.

Diagnosis. The new species clearly differs externally from both known species of the genus in the smaller size and in the short fore wing with a bright contrast pattern; in the genital structure it is distinguished in the longer harpe and more curved phallus.

Distribution. Peru (La Libertad).

Etymology. Apus (in the religion and mythology of Peru, Ecuador, and Bolivia) are the spirits of the mountains and sometimes solitary rocks and caves, that protect the local people in the highlands.

ZISP

Zoological Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences

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