Sorolopha baribaris Sakagami, 2023

Sakagami, Kota, 2023, Review of the species of Sorolopha Lower (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae) in Japan with descriptions of three new species, Zootaxa 5278 (1), pp. 131-142 : 138-141

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5278.1.6

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:1F3139E8-E7D8-46A4-B420-8E9C1EBA2E61

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7895108

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/15FEB3A8-8E02-4652-BFE0-C441A4634A5E

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:15FEB3A8-8E02-4652-BFE0-C441A4634A5E

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Sorolopha baribaris Sakagami
status

sp. nov.

Sorolopha baribaris Sakagami , sp. nov.

( Figs 9, 10 View FIGURES 1–10 , 15 View FIGURES 11–15 , 20 View FIGURES 16–20 )

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:15FEB3A8-8E02-4652-BFE0-C441A4634A5E

Diagnosis. Sorolopha baribaris has a mean forewing length of 6.8 mm (5.5–7.9 mm, n = 37), with little sexual dimorphism except for scale tuffs on the abdomen. Males have scale tuffs on the abdomen, but females don’t. The ground color of the forewing ranges from deep green to brown. The forewing, which is relatively narrow, has a brown subcircular marking in apical area. The male genitalia of S. baribaris are characterized by a valva with a neck, a wide ventral process, and a short cucullus. The male genitalia of this species are similar to those of S. ferruginosa , described from Thailand (cf., Kawabe 1989: 30, fig. 106), but they can be distinguished by the gently curved sacculus, the shorter ventral process of the valva, the longer cucullus, and the gently curved phallus. This species is also superficially similar to S. sphaerocopa , also recorded from Japan (cf., Le et al. 2013: 523, fig. 6; Nasu 2013: 202, pl. 24, figs. 5–6), but it can be distinguished by the round markings and the position of the secondary scale tuff in the male, which is on the hindwing in S. sphaerocopa , but on the abdomen in this species.

Description. Head ( Fig. 10 View FIGURES 1–10 ): Upper frons greenish brown or dark brown, lower frons yellowish brown, vertex roughly scaled, greenish brown or dark brown with blue illumination, labial palpus yellowish brown; antenna brown.

Thorax: Dark green or dark brown, tegulae dark green to dark brown. Legs, except tarsus, light brown dorsally; tarsus dark brown, light brown at apex of each segment; legs dark brown ventrally. Forewing ( Fig. 9 View FIGURES 1–10 ) mean length 6.5 mm in male (5.5–7.3 mm, n = 23), 7.2 mm in female (6.0–7.9 mm, n=14), broadened distally, costa gently curved in distal half, with scattered dark brown spots; nine pairs of strigulae from base to R 4; first to fourth strigulae forming grayish green or light brown fasciae, fascia extending from first strigula merged to that from second strigula at middle, reaching dorsum, fascia extending from third strigula merged with that from fourth strigula at middle, reaching dorsum and curved outward, fascia dark brown between fourth and fifth strigulae, reaching near tornus, oblique grayish green stria extending from strigula fifth, merged with that from sixth strigula on R 1, reaching tornus, seventh, eighth, and nineth strigulae gray or light brown; preterminal spot large, circular, dark brown; apex dark brown; cilia dark brown. Hindwing dark brown, paler towards base. Cilia dark brown.

Abdomen: Dark brown dorsally; beige ventrally, and with black scales from A1 to A3. Scale tuffs on posterior end of A 2 in male. Male genitalia ( Fig. 15 View FIGURES 11–15 ) with tegumen high, narrowed towards apex, erect subtriangular. Uncus small, semicircular. Socius about 2/5 length of tegumen, slightly curved, haired at clavate apex. Valva narrow at base third; sacculus well defined with small prominence, densely haired especially on ventral margin; cucullus short, with ventral process wide, circular, short, with spines along ventral margin, rounded at apex. Phallus lightly sclerotized, moderate in length, curved. Female genitalia ( Fig. 20 View FIGURES 16–20 ) with sterigma strongly sclerotized, funnel-shaped, with wide frontal cleft. Ductus bursae 1.2 times as long as corpus bursae, sclerotized in posterior 1/3, ductus seminalis originating from middle with spherical bulla seminalis. Corpus bursae mushroom-shaped, narrowed in anterior 2/3, with two signa close to ductus bursae, one short horn shaped, another small, round scobination.

Material examined. Holotype. JAPAN: Wakayama Pref.: Hirai , (33°38′14″N, 135°41′23″E, alt. 142 m), ♂, emerged on 27.V.2018, reared from leaves of Actinodaphne acuminata collected on 8.V.2018, K. Sakagami leg. genitalia slide KS226♂ GoogleMaps . Paratypes. JAPAN: HONSHU: Wakayama Pref.: Shitaki (33°51′25″N, 135°50′25″E, alt. 137m), 10♂, 8♀ GoogleMaps , emerged on 27–28. V.2019, reared from leaves of A. acuminata collected on 11. V.2019, K. Sakagami leg., genitalia slide 197♂, 198♀, 200♂, 202♂, 208♂, 210♂, 216♀; Unehata (33°45′23″N, 135°47′52″E, alt. 147m), 5♂, 3♀ GoogleMaps , emerged on 21. V.–4. VI.2019, reared from leaves of A. acuminata collected on 11. V.2019, K. Sakagami leg., genitalia slide KS 201♀; type locality, 6♂, 3♀, emerged on 23–28. V.2018, reared from leaves of A. acuminata collected on 8. V.2018, K. Sakagami leg., genitalia slide KS199♂, 215♀. KYUSHU: Miyazaki Pref.: Gônohara (31°41′52″N, 131°22′00″E, alt. 60 m), Nichinan-shi, 1♂, collected on 23.VII.2022, K. Sakagami leg., genitalia slide KS222♂ GoogleMaps .

Distribution. Japan (Honshu, Kyushu).

Host plant. Actinodaphne acuminata (Lauraceae)

Biology. Adults emerge from leaf shelters of the host between May and June in Honshu. An adult was collected by a light trap in Kyushu in late July. Larvae tie together young leaves of A. acuminata and feed on the leaves within the leaf shelters between April and May in Honshu ( Fig. 21 View FIGURE 21–22 ). This species emerges approximately 10 days before S. plinthograpta and S. sugiurai under laboratory conditions.

Etymology. This species is named from “baribarinoki,″ which is the Japanese name for the host plant Actinodaphne acuminata .

Remarks. This species shows similarities to members of the cyclotoma group in various morphological features, such as the male genitalia. However, the signa of this species differs from that of the cyclotoma group. Further investigation is required to accurately determine the taxonomic position of this species.

V

Royal British Columbia Museum - Herbarium

VI

Mykotektet, National Veterinary Institute

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Lepidoptera

Family

Tortricidae

Genus

Sorolopha

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