Parascepsis ignobilis Grados & Mantilla, 2020

Grados, Juan, Mantilla, Karla & Ramírez, Juan José, 2020, The genusParascepsis Dognin, 1923 (Lepidoptera, Erebidae, Arctiinae, Ctenuchina) in Peru, with the description of three new species, a new combination and their geographical distributions, Zootaxa 4868 (2), pp. 221-242 : 237-241

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4868.2.3

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:C91BCE98-8A73-4347-88D7-88FBD5248785

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4417704

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AE8788-FFBA-1035-F6CD-FCFBFCEDFD84

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Parascepsis ignobilis Grados & Mantilla
status

sp. nov.

Parascepsis ignobilis Grados & Mantilla , sp. nov.

( Figs. 51–58 View FIGURES 51–52 View FIGURES 53–56 View FIGURES 57–58 )

Diagnosis: Together with P. ingenium these are the two species with the first two tergites forming an androconial organ. It is possible to differentiate them because P. ignobilis does not have the postdiscal spot on the forewings, and the white area near the posterior margin is wider in P. ingenium . In the genital capsule, P. ignobilis presents the following: wide valvae, somewhat more in its medial part; dorsal process membranous, narrowing towards the distal end; the beginning of the dorsal process narrower than the valvae; in P. ingenium valvae elongated and narrow; beginning of the dorsal process the same width as the valvae and the same width throughout its length. In P. ingenium the patch of cornuti on the dorsal and right part of the vesica is developed, while in P. ignobilis it is small.

Description. Male ( Figs. 51–52 View FIGURES 51–52 ). Head. Proboscis dark brown. Labial palpi curved upwards, exceeding the vertex. Palpi grayish brown; the second segment 1.5 times the length of the first; the third one, a third of the second; second and third both with scales somewhat lighter on the frontal part. Frontoclypeus brown; upper part with piliform scales whitish gray. Vertex brown. Occiput whitish gray, with three brown lines: a straight central one and two lateral ones directing towards the antennae. Postgena grayish brown. Eye margin gray. Ocelli light brown. Antennal alveolus whitish. Antennae brown, with a soft metallic hue. Scape and pedicel grayish brown. Proximal rami small increasing in length towards the middle part. Middle rami twice the width of the flagellum. Distal rami decrease in length towards their end. Thorax. Patagia and tegulae grayish. Mesoscutum and mesoscutellum grayish brown, with a brown line along the central part. Mesoscutellum grayish. Pleura gray. Tymbal organ at the katepisternum with gray scales. First pair of legs. Grayish brown with a slight iridescent purple hue; coxae with a whitish area at the anterior and the ectal part. Epiphysis brown. Second and third pairs of legs. Grayish brown.

Forewing. Forewing span (15–17 mm) (n = 16). Dorsal: Brown with purple hue, the veins barely noticeable. Ventral: Brown with veins dark. Frenulum brown and retinaculum grayish brown. In CuP-1A+2A white scales from the base to a little more than half the length.At the anal cell, a creamy white androconial patch on the subproximal area. Below the patch, piliform yellow scales. Hindwing. Dorsal: Brown. Costal margin to R S -M 1, includes the discal cell and near the subproximal area of M 1 -M 2 with scales whitish, slightly iridescent. Costal cell with an area elongated and somewhat ovoid with small light brown spicules. An area slightly whitish gray comprising the proximal half of Cu 2 -1A+2A. Anal cell whitish in the two proximal thirds. Ventral: Same as the dorsal side except for the area with spicules. Abdomen. Brown with bluish hue. The dorsal part of the first two tergites modified into an androconial organ of hexagonal shape; part of the first tergite margin with whitish scales; internal part of the androconial organ with modified dark brown scales ( Fig. 50 View FIGURES 49–50 ). Sternites brown. Male Genitalia ( Figs. 53–56 View FIGURES 53–56 ) (Genitalia # JGA 719 MUSM). Tegumen “H”-shaped; anterior part wider than the posterior one, with wide branches; anterior part rounded; a translucent subtriangular area present; at the lateral part of the translucent area, from the base to a little more than half its length with a projection weakly sclerotized. Joining of the tegumen and uncus membranous. Saccus elongated, digitiform with rounded apex. Uncus with the anterior margin somewhat rounded in dorsal view, with the two anterior processes elongated, sclerotized, with few setae; the branches converge towards the center, forming an elongated structure, wide at its base with elongated setae, slightly constricted in its central part and expanding towards the distal part: lateral view, wide at its base with numerous setae, somewhat rounded at its distal part, ending in a sclerotized hook in ventral direction. Valvae short, straight, sclerotized, almost as wide as long; presence of few setae at the dorsal and ventral side; ventral process not developed; dorsal process elongated, membranous, with short setae and sharp towards the dorsal part; an evagination in dorso-distal position, directed towards the internal part, somewhat triangular, sclerotized, with setae; ventral view, elongated and narrow, slightly wider at its base, and curved inward. Juxta slightly sclerotized, subquadrangular, three times wider than the base of the valvae, with tiny ornaments resembling spicules. Aedeagus elongated. Coecum penis slightly developed. Vesica slightly longer than aedeagus, in ventral direction the end is narrow and elongated; patch of cornuti present at the ventral left part; patch of small cornuti at the proximal and dorsal part, and large ones at the proximal ventral part.

Female: Unknown.

Etymology: ignobilis is a neutral adjective in nominative that means “unknown.”

Distribution ( Fig. 60 View FIGURES 60 ): In the Amazonian area of the departments of Loreto, Ucayali, Pasco, Cusco and Puno, reaching the lower part of the mountain forests of the Eastern Slope of the Andes (890 m).

Holotype male ( Figs. 51–52 View FIGURES 51–52 ): PERU, Loreto, Coconilla , 02°42’S, 75°06’W, 160 m, 19.vii.2003, J.J.Ramírez, (LT / MV/ 8 :30-9:00 pm) GoogleMaps . Paratypes (15 males). Loreto , 3 males, Trompeteros , 03°12’56.1’’S, 75°38’26.9’’W, 140 m, 21-22.xi.2008, C. Carranza GoogleMaps ; 1 male, idem except, (Genitalia # JGA 770 MUSM) GoogleMaps ; 1 male, 2.1 km S de Mishana, Río Nanay , 03°53’50’’S, 73°29’32’’W, 103 m, 09.iii.2018, C. Espinoza & C. Ampudia, (Voucher DNA-Artc # 00844- JGA MUSM) GoogleMaps ; 1 male, C.I. Allpahuayo-Mishana, 03°58’01’’S, 73°25’08’’W, 118 m, 04.ii.2011, J. Grados, (Genitalia # JGA 980 MUSM) GoogleMaps . Ucayali, 1 male, 37 km NE Monte Alegre ( Río Tapiche ) 06°23’01’’S, 74°04’35’’W, 175 m, 18-19.x.2008, A. Garcia, (Genitalia # JGA 719 MUSM) GoogleMaps . Pasco, 1 male, P.N. Yanachagua Chemillén, Est. Biol. Paujil , 10°19’25.0’’S, 75°15’48.8’’W, 375 m, 22.v.2008, J. Grados, S. Carbonel & C. Calderón GoogleMaps . Cusco, 1 male, Segakiato, Río Camisea , 11°48’S, 72°52’W, 330 m, 29.ix.1997, J. Grados, (LT/ MV) GoogleMaps ; 1 male, 10 km SE de Puerto Huallaga ( Río Picha ), 11°49’25’’S, 73°03’19’’W, 504 m, 12-16.ix.2015, P. Sánchez GoogleMaps ; 1 male, 1.3 km SSO de Las Malvinas , 11°51’30’’S, 72°57’00’’W, 418 m, 14.ix.2017, C. Espinoza, (Voucher DNA-Artc # 00712- JGA MUSM) GoogleMaps ; 1 male, 4 km NO de Timpia , 12°03’30’’S, 72°51’ 13’’W, 535 m, 20.ix.2010, C. Espinoza & E. Rázuri GoogleMaps ; 1 male, 6 km OSO del Pongo de Mainique , 12°15’02’’S, 72°52’28’’W, 890 m, 01.x.2010, C. Carranza & C. Cavero GoogleMaps ; 1 male, 2 km SO del Pongo de Mainique , 12°15’24.42’’S, 72°50’27.18’’W, 598 m, 11.xi.09, C. Carranza & C. Rossi GoogleMaps . Puno, 1 male, P.N. Bahuaja-Sonene, 4.5 km NO Qba. Aguajal, Río Tambopata , 13°23’31.8’’S, 69°29’58.7’’W, 335 m, 16.ix.2011, J. Grados, E. Rázuri & E. Guillermo GoogleMaps ; 1 male, idem except, (Genitalia # JGA 902 MUSM) GoogleMaps .

Comments: Similar to P. solox in the habitus. However, they are easy to differentiate, because P. ignobilis has the first two tergites modified forming an androconial organ.

MV

University of Montana Museum

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Lepidoptera

Family

Arctiidae

Genus

Parascepsis

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