Anorthoa wangi Guo & Xie, 2024
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.3897/BDJ.12.e139425 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:47A58684-623B-4A00-B5D4-0AF4CA51B95F |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14290793 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/B9BC0130-B3E2-57C6-915F-04FF90F15CE4 |
treatment provided by |
|
scientific name |
Anorthoa wangi Guo & Xie |
status |
sp. nov. |
Anorthoa wangi Guo & Xie sp. nov.
Materials
Type status: Holotype. Occurrence: recordedBy: Tengda Liang, Yulong Zhang & Feiran Chen; sex: male; occurrenceID: D907DE2A-845D-5BCE-A230-6CF15720C4CB; Location: country: China; stateProvince: Fujian; locality: Nanping City, Wuyishan City, Wuyishan National Park, the observation tower of Xianfengling ; verbatimElevation: 1200 m; verbatimLatitude: 27°42′39.29″N; verbatimLongitude: 117°39′8.64″E; Event: eventDate: 04-03-2023 GoogleMaps
Type status: Paratype. Occurrence: recordedBy: Tengda Liang, Yulong Zhang & Feiran Chen; sex: 5 males, 1 female; occurrenceID: 032E7781-19BC-56A0-87FB-055F89F9FBE2; Location: country: China; stateProvince: Fujian; locality: Nanping City, Wuyishan City, Wuyishan National Park, the observation tower of Xianfengling ; verbatimElevation: 1200 m; verbatimLatitude: 27°42′39.29″N; verbatimLongitude: 117°39′8.64″E; Event: eventDate: 05-03-2023 GoogleMaps
Description
Male (Fig. 1 a View Figure 1 a , b View Figure 1 b , c View Figure 1 c and Fig. 2 View Figure 2 ). Forewing length 17-18 mm (n = 6, 17 mm in holotype), wingspan 36-38 mm (n = 6, 36 mm in holotype). Head small, densely covered with pale rufous brown hairs, labial palpus well-developed, outer side dark brown, antenna finely dentate, fascicularly ciliate, deep ochreous brown mainly, paler basally, compound eyes hemispherical, surface ciliate. Thorax dorsally deep ochreous brown or rufous brown, collar and tegula the same colour. Fore-wing nearly triangular, narrow and elongate, apex pointed; forewing ground colour deep ochreous brown or rubiginous, costa paler, except apical angle. A dark brown sub-basal dot present with whitish scales, antemedial line, postmedial line and median fascia obscure, nearly disappearing or present as pale brownish-greyish shadows. Orbicular and reniform stigmata nearly unrecognisable in some specimens, outlines of the recognisable stigmata brownish with whitish scales, filling darker brown than ground colour. The area between postmedial and subterminal lines widely pale ochreous, suffused with dark brown scales in the area near the subterminal line. Subterminal line brown, more or less sinuous, terminal line present as a row of brown spots with a few whitish scales, cilia as ground colour. Hindwing pale ochreous, with weak pale brownish suffusion, discal spot present, cilia as ground colour.
Female (Fig. 1 d View Figure 1 d ). Forewing length 18 mm, wingspan 39 mm. Similar to male, but antenna filiform, shortly ciliate, forewing somewhat more rounded.
Male genitalia (Fig. 3). Uncus short and lanceolate. Tegumen normal, short and narrow, with weak penicular lobes. Fultura inferior sclerotised, nearly in the shape of an arc-sided inverted triangle. Transtilla heavily sclerotised, falcate and equipped with strong teeth. Saccus well-developed, V-shaped, narrow and elongate. Valva elongated, but significantly shorter than the aedeagus, evenly tapering towards a small, triangular, apically finely pointed cucullus. Corona undeveloped, pollex short and small. Sacculus broad and clavus reduced. Ampulla well-developed, arc-shaped, basally thick and apically digitiform. Harpe flattened, trapezoidal-capitiform with a long basal bar. Aedeagus cylindrical, long and thick, ventral carina bar eversible, quite long and sclerotised, ending with several acute teeth, ventro-lateral carina bar short, ending with a triangular tooth. Vesica quite long, with a tortuous tubular shape, the sub-basal diverticulum of the basal part of the vesica bears a cluster of spiculiform cornuti, distal part of the vesica armed with a long field of small, spiculiform cornuti.
Female genitalia (Fig. 4 View Figure 4 ). Papillae anales trapezoidal. Apophyses posteriores and anteriores normal, both slender, with the former slightly longer than the latter. Ostium bursae tubular, long and narrow and the anterior three-quarters sclerotised, with heavily sclerotised narrow marginal folds on the dorsal side. The proximal end of the ostium fused with the ductus by a ribbed-cristate ring. Ductus bursae narrowly tubular, densely wrinkled, almost equal in length to the ostium bursae. A long, heavily sclerotised cristate lateral ribbon present along the left side and extending into the basal part of the appendix bursae. Appendix bursae helicoid, quite long, with the distal end dilated slightly and the surface rough and rugose-wrinkled. Corpus bursae membranous, ovoid and four long signum-stripes present.
Diagnosis
The new species is the sister species of A. changi . They can be distinguished by the following characters: a) The size of the new species is somewhat larger, the forewing length of the type specimens of the new species ranges from 17 to 18 mm, for A. changi , it is 15 to 16 mm; b) The medial to distal section of the valva is broader than that of A. changi ; c) The ampulla of the new species is distally narrower and more curved; d) In female genitalia, the distal end of the appendix bursae is smaller and narrower than that of A. changi and the surface is much rougher.
Etymology
The new species is dedicated to Professor Min Wang, who has carried out extensive work on Lepidoptera taxonomy in southern China.
Distribution
Xianfengling, Wuyishan National Park, Wuyishan City, Fujian Province, south-eastern China (Fig. 5 View Figure 5 ).
Biology
Seven adults were collected at the beginning of March in the Wuyi Mountain area.
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.