Philippinithosia, Volynkin & Černý, 2023
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5352.2.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:1FCBB820-6683-44D0-A98D-8ADA327BEA43 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8407133 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/97096A01-89B2-4FDC-974F-C64203997830 |
taxon LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:act:97096A01-89B2-4FDC-974F-C64203997830 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Philippinithosia |
status |
gen. nov. |
Philippinithosia gen. n.
http://zoobank.org/ urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:97096A01-89B2-4FDC-974F-C64203997830
Type species: Philippinithosia lourensi sp. n., by present designation.
Diagnosis. Species of the new genus ( Figs 28–35 View FIGURES 24–31 View FIGURES 32–39 ) are externally very similar to Leucanithosia ( Figs 1–27 View FIGURES 1–7 View FIGURES 8–15 View FIGURES 16–23 View FIGURES 24–31 ) but in males, the androconial tuft on the foreleg consists of ochreous yellow and shorter scales, which are elongate and grey in Leucanithosia . The male genital capsule of Philippinithosia ( Figs 58–62 View FIGURES 58–60 View FIGURES 61–64 ) is characterised by the distally dilated and swollen dorsal part of the valva and the distal saccular process, which both are densely covered with minute setae, the feature characteristic of the genus. Additionally, compared to Leucanithosia ( Figs 40–57 View FIGURES 40–43 View FIGURES 44–47 View FIGURES 48–50 View FIGURES 51–54 View FIGURES 55–57 ), Philippinithosia lacks the intervalval commissure, and its juxta is weakly sclerotised whereas in Leucanithosia , the valvae are proximally connected by a commissure, and the posterior section of the juxta is heavily sclerotised and laterally fused with transtillae and ventrally connected to the intervalval commissure. The uncus of the new genus is proximally narrow and distally dilated and swollen whereas it is evenly swollen and basally dilated in Leucanithosia . The phallus of Philippinithosia is broader than in Leucanithosia and lacks the distal serrulate plate. The vesicae of the two genera display no fundamental differences. The female genitalia ground plan of Philippinithosia ( Figs 72–74 View FIGURES 69–72 View FIGURES 73–76 ) is similar to Leucanithosia ( Figs. 65–71 View FIGURES 65–68 View FIGURES 69–72 ) but in the current new genus, the appendix bursae is weakly expressed whereas the bursa copulatrix of Leucanithosia is clearly subdivided into a corpus bursae and a sack-like appendix bursae.
Description. Adults. Sexual dimorphism limited: female somewhat larger than male and with slightly broader forewing. Antenna dark grey, ciliate in both sexes. Head creamy or ochreous creamy. Thorax creamy. Pro- and metathorax with black spot medio-dorsally. Patagia ochreous creamy. Male foreleg with androconial tuft consisting of ochreous yellow scales. Tegula creamy with black spot medially. Forewing elongate and narrow, with almost parallel margins; costal margin straight proximally and medially and downcurved distally; anal margin convex. Forewing ground colour creamy or ochreous creamy. Pattern represented by dark grey or brown suffusion along veins, reduced in certain species. Forewing cilia creamy or ochreous creamy. Hindwing unicolorous creamy or ochreous creamy, paler than forewing. Abdomen creamy with intense admixture of ochreous scales laterally and distally. Male genitalia. Uncus proximally narow and distally dilated and swollen, with tiny claw-shaped tip. Tegumen weakly sclerotised, with posteriorly dilated arms. Tuba analis membranous, as broad as half of tegumen length. Vinculum shorter than tegumen, with narrowly U-shaped saccus. Valva lobular, somewhat dilated medially. Valva apex dilated, swollen and densely covered with short setae. Sacculus narrow and elongate, distal saccular process dilated and densely setose apically. Juxta moderately sclerotised, trapezoidal with medial anterior incision. Anellus membranous. Phallus short but broad, cylindrical. Proximal section of vesica broadly tubular. Distal section of vesica narrower than proximal one, tubular, terminating with one or two tubular diverticula bearing one or two short but basally broad cornuti apically. Vesica ejaculatorius originates medially, with stick-shaped basal plate. Female genitalia. Papilla analis trapezoidal with rounded corners, weakly setose. Apophyses elongate and thin, apophysis anterioris shorter or equal in length to apophysis posterioris. Postvaginal area membranous. Ductus bursae elongate, tubular, rugose. Corpus bursae broad sack-like with two small and rounded signa, rugose posteriorly, in certain species with short and semiglobular postero-lateral rugose appendix at junction with ductus bursae. Appendix bursae not separated from corpus bursae, represented as broad lateral protrusion with ductus seminalis originating laterally.
Distribution. The genus is endemic to the Philippines (absent from Palawan Island).
Etymology. The new genus name is an aggregate of the toponym ‘The Philippines’ and the genus group name Lithosia , and refers to the Philippine Archipelago to which the new genus is endemic. Gender is feminine.
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.
Kingdom |
|
Phylum |
|
Class |
|
Order |
|
Family |
|
SubFamily |
Arctiinae |
Tribe |
Lithosiini |