Stigmella altimontana Remeikis & Stonis

Stonis, Jonas R., Diškus, Arūnas, Remeikis, Andrius, Gerulaitis, Virginijus & Karsholt, Ole, 2016, Leaf-mining Nepticulidae (Lepidoptera) from record high altitudes: documenting an entire new fauna in the Andean páramo and puna, Zootaxa 4181 (1), pp. 1-94 : 51

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4181.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:639B9F0E-4E0C-4859-9A32-093511BEEFB8

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3508309

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E487C7-FF86-D250-FF46-25EEF2E0F825

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Stigmella altimontana Remeikis & Stonis
status

sp. nov.

Stigmella altimontana Remeikis & Stonis , sp. nov.

( Figs 18 View FIGURES 18 – 19 , 27 View FIGURE 27 , 30 View FIGURES 30 – 31 , 133–142 View FIGURES 133 – 138 View FIGURES 139 – 142 )

Type material. Holotype: Ƌ, PERU, Dept. Ancash, 50 km SE Huaraz, Rio Puma Pampa, Valley Ingenio , 9°53'53"S, 77° 15'40"W, elevation 4200–4350 m, 14–15.ii.1987, O. Karsholt, genitalia slide no. RA539Ƌ ( ZMUC) GoogleMaps . Paratypes: 1 ♀, same label data as holotype, genitalia slide no. RA 540♀ (ZMUC); 1 Ƌ, Dept. Ancash, 35 km SE Huaraz, Cerro Cahuish, Quabrada Pucavado , 9°40'50"S, 77°13'32"W, elevation 4100 m, 15–18.ii.1987, O. Karsholt, genitalia slide no. RA538Ƌ ( ZMUC) GoogleMaps .

Diagnosis. Externally closely similar to S. auriargentata sp. nov. The combination of: specific set of numerous very large cornuti, transtilla without sublateral processes, bilobed uncus, and golden grey forewing with silver shining apical area distinguishes S. altimontana sp. nov. from all other Stigmella species.

Male ( Fig. 133–135 View FIGURES 133 – 138 ). Forewing length 2.8–3.2 mm; wingspan 6.1–6.9 mm. Head: palpi pale grey to cream; frontal tuft comprised of pale orange to grey-orange and fuscous piliform scales (or only fuscous piliform scales); collar golden grey; scape white to yellowish cream; antenna as long as half the length of forewing; flagellum with 32–33 segments, fuscous, glossy. Thorax and tegula dark grey with strong golden gloss. Forewing golden grey, glossy, in apical 1/3 silvery shining; fringe pale grey to dark grey; underside of forewing dark grey-brown. Hindwing grey cream to grey, without androconia; fringe pale grey. Legs brownish cream to pale brown with golden gloss, dark brown on upper side. Abdomen fuscous, without band of androconia on upper side, dark grey on underside; tufts short; genital segments brownish grey to brownish cream.

Female. Similar to male. Flagellum with 28 segments. Abdominal tip with ovipositor, not rounded.

Male genitalia ( Figs 136–141 View FIGURES 133 – 138 View FIGURES 139 – 142 ). Capsule longer (325 µm) than wide (205 µm). Uncus slightly narrowing distally, bilobed. Gnathos with two caudal processes and large anterior corners. Valva 225–230 µm long, 70–75 µm wide, with two slender apical processes and little sinous or straight inner lobe; transtilla without sublateral processes. Juxta membranous, triangularly widened caudally. Vinculum with lateral lobes and short ventral plate. Phallus ( Fig. 138 View FIGURES 133 – 138 ) 230–240 µm long, 90–100 µm wide; vesica with about 8–9 large, horn-like cornuti and 2–3 smaller, spine-like cornuti.

Female genitalia ( Fig. 142 View FIGURES 139 – 142 ). Total length 850–860 µm. Anterior and posterior apophyses almost equal in length. Corpus bursae with long, heavily folded distal part and small, oval-shaped, 300 µm long, 255 µm wide basal part with comb-like pectinations; signa absent. Accessory sac wide but very short; ductus spermathecae with small sinuous sclerite but without convolutions. Abdominal tip extended into an ovipositor.

Bionomics. Adults fly in February. Otherwise biology unknown.

Distribution ( Figs 18 View FIGURES 18 – 19 , 27 View FIGURE 27 ). This species occurs in the high Peruvian Andes ( Peru: Ancash Departamento) at altitudes about 4100–4350 m.

Etymology. The species name is derived from Latin altus (high) and montanus (mountainous) in reference to the species occurrence at very high altitudes.

ZMUC

Zoological Museum, University of Copenhagen

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Lepidoptera

Family

Nepticulidae

Genus

Stigmella

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF