Elachista olekarsholti, Sruoga, 2021

Sruoga, Virginijus, 2021, A new species of Elachista Treitschke, 1833 (Lepidoptera, Elachistidae, Elachistinae) from China, with identification keys to the Asian species of the Elachista saccharella species group, ZooKeys 1068, pp. 41-50 : 41

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1068.70807

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:851741D8-9AB1-4802-ACA8-5E021D679197

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/DD59D982-4E63-4797-B541-F9736A0D47AE

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:DD59D982-4E63-4797-B541-F9736A0D47AE

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Elachista olekarsholti
status

sp. nov.

Elachista olekarsholti sp. nov.

Figures 1-3 View Figures 1–3 , 4-8 View Figures 4–8 , 9-12 View Figures 9–12

Material examined.

Holotype. CHINA • ♂; Henan Prov. [ince], Tongbai ; 300 m alt.; 11-13 Sep. 2000; O. Karsholt leg.; NKU VS501 . Paratype. CHINA • 1 ♂; same label as holotype; ZMUC VS502 .

Diagnosis.

Elachista olekarsholti belongs to the E. saccharella species group. It is a small, dark-coloured species with indistinct wing markings and a dorsoventrally flattened head. In wing pattern and male genitalia, the new species is most similar to E. albrechti Kaila, 1998, known from Nepal. The main differences between E. albrechti (cf. Kaila 1998) and E. olekarsholti are: (1) spinose knob of gnathos very long and narrow in E. olekarsholti , in E. albrechti , it is club-shaped, with large distal dilation; (2) digitate process in E. olekarsholti is short and narrow, in E. albrechti , it is strongly dilated; (3) saccus in E. olekarsholti very short, whereas it is three times longer than wide in E. albrechti ; (4) phallus in E. olekarsholti strongly curved beyond the middle, with cornutus, in E. albrechti , it is strongly curved before the middle, without cornutus.

Male

(Figs 1-3 View Figures 1–3 ). Forewing length 3.5-3.6 mm; wingspan 7.7-7.9 mm (n = 2). Head: frons shiny, creamy white; vertex whitish-brown; neck tuft greyish-brown; labial palpus upwards curved, diverging, about 1.7 times as long as width of head, whitish-creamy, distal part of second and third segment with few dark brown scales; scape creamy white below, with few dark brown scales above, without pecten; flagellum blackish-brown above, weakly annulated with paler rings, basal part creamy white below. Thorax and tegula greyish-brown, mottled with dark brown tipped scales. Forewing: ground colour blackish-brown, basal part slightly paler, intermixed with few rusty scales; indistinctly delimited oblique whitish-creamy streak from 1/3 of costa to fold where there is a small group of raised black scales; indistinct whitish creamy spot at 2/3 length of costa and similar one on dorsum just before it; fringe scales brownish-grey, fringe line brownish-black. Hind-wing brownish-grey, with fringe concolorous.

Female. Unknown.

Male genitalia (Figs 4 View Figures 4–8 - 12 View Figures 9–12 ). Uncus lobes very small, triangular-shaped, apex with few tiny setae. Basal arms of gnathos very long, heavily melanised and strongly bent towards posterior direction, apically fused; spinose knob about two times as long as wide, apically widened. Costa of valva almost straight; basal fold of costa meets distal fold at 1/3 from base. Cucullus medially deeply incised, thus divided into two lobes: triangular lobe where sacculus meets cucullus and another longer distal lobe. Digitate process short and slender, three times as long as its width, distally with few short setae. Juxta lobes large, about 1/4 length of valva, mesially somewhat produced, medial incision between juxta lobes very short (Figs 4 View Figures 4–8 and 10 View Figures 9–12 ), distal margin medially slightly concave, ventral surface with short setae medially and long setae laterally. Vinculum with broad median ridge, tapered to short and broad saccus. Phallus about 1.6 length of valva, twisted and strongly curved at basal 1/2 and 4/5; vesica with group of minute spines and long folded cornutus.

Biology.

Unknown.

Flight period.

Based on the specimens available, adults fly in September.

Distribution.

So far, this species is known only from east-central China.

Etymology.

The new species is named in honour of Ole Karsholt (Copenhagen, Denmark) who collected the type specimens.

Remarks.

The phallus of the holotype is slightly distorted during slide mounting and, therefore, looks somewhat skewed in Fig. 5 View Figures 4–8 .

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Lepidoptera

Family

Elachistidae

Genus

Elachista