Nilionympha Ren & Engel, 2007
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4581.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:20A9776D-AE5F-41BC-A35B-0C5E42EDFE48 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C47176-FF96-8D21-7AD2-0355FCB495BA |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Nilionympha Ren & Engel, 2007 |
status |
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Nilionympha Ren & Engel, 2007 View in CoL
( Fig. 7E View FIGURE 7 )
Type species. Nilionympha pulchella Ren & Engel, 2007: 216 (by original designation).
Diagnosis. Wings relatively short and broad, apices slightly rounded; FW costal area narrow, subcostal veinlets widely spaced basally, denser distally, pterostigma relatively broad; FW RP1 originating relatively distant to origin of RP; both wings with numerous regular crossveins, outer gradate series absent; both wings with MA and MP with few irregular pectinate/dichotomous branches, MP area larger than MA; FW CuA irregularly dichotomously to pectinately branched, HW CuA more strongly pectinate and larger in area, with occasional end-twigging; FW CuP pectinately branched, HW CuP short, simple.
Comments. Nilionympha was originally described based on incomplete specimens of N. pulchella and N. imperfecta Ren & Engel , 200). Li et al. (2018) recently revised the genus and transferred N. imperfecta to Enodinympha after a reappraisal of the type specimen and description of the forewing. Unfortunately, the hind wing venation of both Nilionympha and Enodinympha was misinterpreted by both Ren & Engel (2007) and Li et al. (2018), specifically the identity of the posterior veins. In both cases RP1 was misinterpreted as MA, MP as CuA, CuA as CuP. Indeed, their interpretation would actually preclude placement in Gumillinae as an interpretation of an elongate and pectinately branched CuP in the hind wing would place both genera in subfamilies such as Stenosmylinae . We identify the hind wing CuP as a short, simple vein basal to the elongate and pectinately branched CuA, which taken into consideration with characters such as the wing cell arrangement and highly elongate antennae, Enodinympha and Nilionympha clearly both belong to Gumillinae .
Included species.
N. pulchella Ren & Engel, 2007 ( China) View in CoL (Middle Jurassic)
N. shantouensis Li et al., 2018 ( China) View in CoL (Middle Jurassic)
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.
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Nilionympha Ren & Engel, 2007
Winterton, Shaun L., Martins, Caleb Califre, Makarkin, Vladimir, Ardila-Camacho, Adrian & Wang, Yongjie 2019 |
N. shantouensis
Li 2018 |
N. pulchella
Ren & Engel 2007 |