Brunia vestigialis, Volynkin, 2022

Volynkin, Anton V., 2022, A review of the genus Brunia Moore from the Andaman Islands (India) with a description of a new species (Lepidoptera: Erebidae: Arctiinae), Ecologica Montenegrina 59, pp. 82-91 : 83-85

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.37828/em.2022.59.8

publication LSID

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:C7722311-7737-4B29-B67F-A1A6AED819DA

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13240735

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/70A81094-5747-4579-A5F2-597A3E4441C9

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:70A81094-5747-4579-A5F2-597A3E4441C9

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Brunia vestigialis
status

sp. nov.

Brunia vestigialis sp. n.

https://zoobank.org/ urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:70A81094-5747-4579-A5F2-597A3E4441C9

( Figs 1–3 View Figures 1–10 , 17 View Figures 17–19 , 23 View Figures 23–27 )

Type material. Holotype ( Figs 1 View Figures 1–10 , 17 View Figures 17–19 ): male, “ India – Andaman Isl. | Middle Andaman | Mayabander · 19.– 20.iii.1998 | leg. A.Kamenev & V. Siniaev | ex coll. Dr. A. Schintlmeister ” / “Slide | ZSM Arct. | 2021- 268♂ | A. Volynkin ” ( MWM / ZSM).

Paratypes. INDIA, ANDAMAN & NICOBAR ISLANDS: 1 male, 2 females, the same data as in the holotype, gen. prep. Nos.: ZSM Arct. 2021-269 (male), ZSM Arct. 2021-272 (female) (prepared by Volynkin) ( MWM / ZSM); 1 male, North Andaman , Mayabunder, 6 km S; Karmatany – rainforest, 12°50'6[5]1''N, 092°56'06''E, 17–21.XI.2000, J.-P. Rudloff leg., gen. prep. No.: ZSM Arct. 2021-010 (prepared by Volynkin) ( MWM / ZSM) .

Diagnosis. The male of B. vestigialis sp. n. ( Figs 1, 2 View Figures 1–10 ) is externally reminiscent of B. gibonica ( Figs 4–6 View Figures 1–10 ) and B. nebulifera ( Fig. 8 View Figures 1–10 ) but distinguished by the ochreous forewing ground colour (it is ochreous-yellow in B. gibonica and yellow in B. nebulifera ), the markedly smaller and more diffuse distal shade of the forewing, and the somewhat darker hindwing. The female of the new species ( Fig. 3 View Figures 1–10 ) is clearly different from both the similar congeners ( Figs 7, 9, 10 View Figures 1–10 ) due to the dark brown forewing ground colour with a broad pale yellow costal stripe but whereas the females of B. gibonica and B. nebulifera are similar to the males and have only broader subapical shades of the forewing. The female of B. vestigialis sp. n. is more similar to the sympatric B. antica ( Fig. 16 View Figures 11–16 ) but differs in the smaller size, the more apically rounded forewing with a darker brown ground colour, and the somewhat broader yellow costal stripe, which is broader apically. The male genital capsule of the new species ( Fig. 17 View Figures 17–19 ) is similar to B. gibonica ( Fig. 18 View Figures 17–19 ) and B. nebulifera ( Fig. 19 View Figures 17–19 ) but distinguished by the thinner, thorn-shaped and distally upcurved distal saccular process, which is swollen and with a short triangular tip in the congeners. The phallus of B. vestigialis sp. n. is somewhat more dilated distally than in B. gibonica and B. nebulifera . The vesica configurations of the three species are similar but in B. vestigialis sp. n., the dorsal chamber is somewhat broader, lacking the diverticulum, and bearing a straight cornutus with a markedly broader base whereas it is somewhat curved, shark tooth-shaped in B. gibonica and almost conical with a narrow base in B. nebulifera . Additionally, the ventral diverticulum of B. vestigialis sp. n. is somewhat broader than in B. gibonica and has a slightly broader distal lobe. Compared to the new species, the ventral diverticulum of B. nebulifera lacks the cornutus and has a markedly narrower distal lobe. The female genitalia of B. vestigialis sp. n. ( Fig. 23 View Figures 23–27 ) differ from B. gibonica ( Fig. 24 View Figures 23–27 ) and B. nebulifera ( Fig. 25 View Figures 23–27 ) in the markedly broader posterior sclerotised section of the corpus bursae, and the broader anterior globular section of the corpus bursae. In addition, the signa bursae of the new species are larger than in B. nebulifera .

Description. External morphology of adults. Sexual dimorphism substantial. Male ( Figs 1, 2 View Figures 1–10 ). Forewing length 9.5–10.0mm. Head pale ochreous. Antenna brown, setose. Prothorax and patagia ochreous-yellow. Tegula ochreous-yellow with broad brown spot distally. Mesothorax brown. Metathorax brown with pale ochreous spot medially. Forewing elongate and narrow, with almost parallel margins medially, with rounded apex. Forewing ground colour uniform pale ochreous with bean-shaped greyish-brown diffuse distal shade not reaching wing margins. Hindwing uniform pale ochreous-yellow. Abdomen pale ochreous proximally and ochreous-yellow distally. Male genitalia ( Fig. 17 View Figures 17–19 ). Uncus short, thick, with tapered and downcurved distal half and tiny claw-like tip. Arms of tegumen broad and short. Tuba analis width somewhat less than tegumen length. Scaphium setose. Vinculum longer than tegumen, heavily sclerotised, V-shaped and apically rounded. Valva short, broad proximally and strongly tapered distally with elongate, narrowly triangular and somewhat downcurved dorsal lobe. Ventral plate of costa positioned postmedially and bearing narrow semielliptical crest distally reaching base of distal saccular process. Sacculus narrow with heavily sclerotised distal half. Distal saccular process short, thorn-shaped, distally upcurved and apically rounded. Juxta broadly conical, posteriorly rounded and with weakly sclerotised medial and proximal areas. Phallus more or less equal in length to vinculum, broad, with dilated and serrulate distal third. Vesica with broad semiglobular and granulose dorsal chamber bearing robust thorn-like cornutus with strongly dilated base. Medial diverticulum short, utricular, granulose. Ventral diverticulum broad, semiglobular and membranous with utricular and granulose distal lobe and bearing short but basally broad cornutus ventrally. Distal diverticulum strongly elongate and tubular, membranous proximally and medially, granulose distally and bearing short but basally broad cornutus apically. Vesica ejaculatorius originates medially-laterally. Female ( Fig. 3 View Figures 1–10 ). Forewing length 10.5–11.0 mm. Head pale ochreous. Antenna brown, filiform. Prothorax and patagia ochreous-yellow. Tegula ochreous-yellow with broad brown spot distally. Mesothorax brown. Metathorax brown with pale ochreous spot medially. Forewing elongate and narrow, with rounded apex. Forewing ground colour brown with broad pale yellow costal stripe encircling apex, and thin pale yellow terminal line. Cilia pale yellow. Hindwing ground colour uniform pale yellow, more intense distally and along outer margin. Abdomen pale ochreous proximally and brown with ochreous-yellow suffusion distally. Female genitalia ( Fig. 23 View Figures 23–27 ). Papilla analis trapezoid with rounded corners, setose. Apophyses long and thin, apophysis anterioris shorter than apophysis posterioris. Ostium bursae broad. Postvaginal plate short but broad, weakly sclerotised. Ventral and lateral margins of ostium bursae gelatinous and somewhat swollen. Ductus bursae short, dorso-ventrally flattened, heavily sclerotised with longitudinal folds. Posterior section of corpus bursae conical with asymmetrically protruding right margin, heavily sclerotised with gelatinous medial part. Anterior section of corpus bursae broader than posterior one, semiglobular, weakly granulose and bearing two small circular signa. Appendix bursae asymmetrically conical and apically rounded, heavily sclerotised, positioned ventrally-laterally on right side of posterior section of corpus bursae.

Distribution. Endemic to the Andaman Islands.

Etymology. The specific epithet refers to the distal spot of the male forewing, which is markedly smaller than in the similar species.

V

Royal British Columbia Museum - Herbarium

ZSM

Bavarian State Collection of Zoology

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Lepidoptera

Family

Erebidae

Genus

Brunia

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