Eoophyla nandinalis ( Hampson, 1906 ) Published, 2012

Agassiz, David J. L., 2012, The Acentropinae (Lepidoptera: Pyraloidea: Crambidae) of Africa, Zootaxa 3494, pp. 1-73 : 38-39

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3494.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:E31EF0DC-825E-4D60-8AED-3127019CF8F0

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6384874

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C387FB-FFE1-655A-FF43-440BFD30C347

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Eoophyla nandinalis ( Hampson, 1906 )
status

comb. nov.

Eoophyla nandinalis ( Hampson, 1906) comb. n.

Argyractis nandinalis Hampson, 1906: 383 View in CoL .

Type locality: Kenya: Eb Urru (now Eburu)

Imago (Fig. 55): Wingspan 18–26mm. Head whitish ochreous, darker centrally; labial palpus upturned, whitish, segments 1 and 2 with a fuscous line laterally; antenna pale fuscous, scape whitish. Thorax ochreous; tegulae whitish. Forewing ground colour whitish; costa fusous in basal half; a weak subbasal fuscous fascia; an oblique yellow antemedian fascia in dorsal half of wing; a slender angled fuscous median fascia; a yellow crescent in disc almost connected to preapical costal strigula, preceded by a fuscous costal strigula; terminal band yellow, some black dashes along termen; oblique silver grey tornal spot; terminal cilia pale fuscous. Hindwing white; an obscure central fuscous subbasal spot; irregular yellow median fascia, some fuscous scales beyond this; double submarginal line; four terminal eyespots, first very small, 2 and 3 large, each with a pair of silver spots 2/3 up each side, termen basally yellow; inner half of cilia fuscous.

Male genitalia (Fig. 117): Uncus tapered to a blunt point; gnathos 3/5 uncus, tip curved slightly towards uncus, bearing spines; valva gradually widening, then reducing in width then forming a right angle at apex, shortly before this arises a single strong seta; saccus rounded; juxta set with four stout spines on either side; aedeagus waisted, apical area surrounded by sclerotised spiny area, a few weakly defined cornuti. Sternum 8 with a pair of bluntly pointed projections separated by a deep V-shaped incision.

Female genitalia (Fig. 171): Ostium wide, cup-shaped; ductus long and broad becoming wrinkled before sclerotised colliculum; corpus bursae at first narrow then widening into a sock-shaped sack, a double sclerotised band along the right hand side; ostium and ductus 5/8 length of corpus bursae.

Tympanal organs: Venulae straight and parallel, tympani as rounded squares.

Diagnosis: A comparatively large species, distinguished by the double subterminal line of the hindwing; in the male genitalia the shape of sternum 8 described above is unique.

Biology: Unknown; in rivers; adults continuously brooded, recorded in every month except June.

Distribution: D.R. Congo; Kenya, in the highlands, chiefly rivers arising from the Mau Forest on the West side of the Rift Valley.

Material examined: Holotype ♀ Eb Urru , B.E.Africa , now KENYA: Eburu, near Naivasha . KENYA: 1♂ 5 ♀ Nairobi ( BMNH), 1♀ Turi, 3♂ 10 ♀ Rongai, 4♂ 7 ♀ Kericho ( DJLA), 1♂ 3 ♀ ( KVNM), 1♀ Ndoinet ( DJLA); D.R. CONGO: 5♂ 7 ♀ N. Lac Kivu ( MRAC)

BMNH

United Kingdom, London, The Natural History Museum [formerly British Museum (Natural History)]

MRAC

Belgium, Tervuren, Musee Royal de l'Afrique Centrale

MRAC

Musée Royal de l’Afrique Centrale

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Lepidoptera

SuperFamily

Pyraloidea

Family

Crambidae

SubFamily

Acentropinae

Genus

Eoophyla

Loc

Eoophyla nandinalis ( Hampson, 1906 )

Agassiz, David J. L. 2012
2012
Loc

Argyractis nandinalis

Hampson, G. F. 1906: 383
1906
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