Paratepa Razowski and Becker, 2001

Brown, John W., 2024, New genera and species of tortricid moths from Chile and Argentina (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae), Zootaxa 5551 (1), pp. 51-90 : 70

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5551.1.2

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:BEBB4D36-855E-4AD3-829D-A3B2B17B81B7

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14390681

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/626F651B-1869-FF84-FF38-1354FE42FA8F

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Paratepa Razowski and Becker, 2001
status

 

Paratepa Razowski and Becker, 2001 View in CoL

Paratepa Razowski and Becker 2001: 106 View in CoL ; Brown 2005: 476.

Type species: Paratepa ferruginea Razowski and Becker, 2001 View in CoL .

Diagnosis and remarks. Paratepa was described for the single new species P. ferruginea , which was based on a series of male and female specimens from Mato Grosso, Minas Gerais, Federal District, São Paulo, Paraná, and Santa Catarina, Brazil. Razowski and Becker (2001) provided illustrations of the male and female genitalia, but not the adult. Adults of Paratepa ( Figs 15, 16 View FIGURES 9‒16 ) are nearly indistinguishable from those of the closely related Atepa Razowski, 1991 , a Central America genus, but the forewing ground color in Paratepa is usually darker orange compared to the paler yellow orange in Atepa , and males of Paratepa possess a characteristic euliine hairpencil from the foreleg femur ( Brown 1990) that is absent in Atepa . The two genera can be separated by features of the male and female genitalia. In the male genitalia of Atepa , the valvae are long and slender, with a conspicuously pointed apex and a broad sacculus (greater than half the width of the valva); and the transtilla has a pair of elongate, subbasal lobes ( Razowski 1992: figs. 1‒4). In the male genitalia of Paratepa ( Fig. 35 View FIGURES 29‒36 ), the valvae are broader with a rounded apex and a narrow sacculus; and the transtilla has a pair of short, submedian, triangular processes. The two genera share a short, broad phallus. The female genitalia of the two are similar, with the posterior portion of the ductus bursae (which is undifferentiated from the corpus bursae in P. argentinana ) strongly sclerotized, and the anterior portion (along with the corpus bursae) membranous. The two can be separated by the deeply lobed posterior margin of the sterigma in Atepa (see Razowski 1991: figs. 5‒7).

Distribution and biology. The genus is recorded from Brazil, Paraguay ( USNM), and Argentina (see below). The early stages are unknown.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Lepidoptera

Family

Tortricidae

Loc

Paratepa Razowski and Becker, 2001

Brown, John W. 2024
2024
Loc

Paratepa

Brown, J. W. 2005: 476
Razowski, J. & Becker, V. O. 2001: 106
2001
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