Amorbia catarina Phillips & Powell, 2007
publication ID |
11755334 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:28818E29-DB9A-4423-8488-648C45E607EF |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5104656 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/7464879A-1F63-FFE3-FF48-FC6C3E41DDEF |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Amorbia catarina Phillips & Powell |
status |
sp. nov. |
5. Amorbia catarina Phillips & Powell View in CoL , new species
Figs. 20, 66, 133
DIAGNOSIS. Amorbia catarina is distinguished from A. dominica , its most closely related species, by the presence of differentiated scales on the HW anal area, which are long, straight, and concolorous with the wing; the presence of a dorsal hump on the second segment of the abdomen; and possession of anterior projections of the sacculus.
DESCRIPTION. MALE. FW length 8.5–8.9 mm (mean = 8.8; n = 5). HEAD: Frons convex, white scaled, vertex scaling in two groups, brown. Labial palpus 2.0X length of inter-antennal space, brown laterally, paler on inner surface; junction of segments II and III an oblique angle. THORAX: Dorsum smooth scaled, brown; tegula concolorous. FW ground brown with basal, median, and subterminal fasciae, and apex darker. Costal fold well developed, reaching ca. 0.5 length of FW. HW pale brown, scales in anal region long, straight, concolorous. Rs vein swollen in basal 0.33. ABDOMEN: Dorsal pit absent, a dorsal hump present on second segment. Genitalia as in Fig. 66 (slide # EPR48, USNM, Trinidad; n = 3). Transtilla narrow in middle posterior, densely covered with fine spines. Valva subrectangular. Sacculus well defined, ca. 0.65X length of valva, without emargination, with anterior projections. Aedeagus stout, 0.5X length of valva, bent near middle.
FEMALE. Unknown.
TYPE MATERIAL. Holotype: Male: BRAZIL: SANTA CATARINA: New Bremen , 5.xii.1936, F. Hoffmann ( USNM).
Paratypes. Same data as holotype, but 1M, 25.vii.1936 ( EME) , 1M, 24.xi.1936 ( USNM) . TRINIDAD: Arima Valley, Simla Res. Station , 2M, 6/ 12.ii.1966 (S. S. & W. D. Duckworth, USNM) .
DISTRIBUTION AND BIOLOGY. This species was collected in southern Brazil and Trinidad ( Fig. 133) in February, July, November, and December. The female and the early stages are unknown.
ETYMOLOGY. The name of this species refers to the state of the type locality, Santa Catarina, Brazil, and is treated as a noun in apposition.
USNM |
Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History |
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.