Thiotricha uncaticula, Lee & Li, 2024

Lee, Ga-Eun & Li, Houhun, 2024, A taxonomic review of Thiotricha Meyrick, 1886 (Lepidoptera, Gelechiidae, Thiotrichinae) from China, with descriptions of 84 new species, Zootaxa 5449 (1), pp. 1-222 : 39

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5449.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:CAC513A2-D2B4-4E6E-BAB6-CCE6E054680F

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11232991

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03CC3667-981D-1D59-FF05-8B70DCD3E1EE

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Thiotricha uncaticula
status

sp. nov.

Thiotricha uncaticula sp. nov.

( Figs 8E View FIGURE 8 , 23T View FIGURE 23 , 32B View FIGURE 32 , 49D View FIGURE 49 )

Type material. Holotype ♂, CHINA, Yunnan Province, Dali City, Weishan County, Mt. Weibao (25.18°N, 100.34°E), 2205 m, 2.viii.2014, leg. Kaijian Teng, Wei Guan, Xiuchun Wang and Shurong Liu, genitalia slide no. LGE18350 GoogleMaps . Paratype. 1 ♀, same data as holotype except 31.vii.2014, genitalia slide no. LGE18349 GoogleMaps .

Diagnosis. Thiotricha uncaticula is superficially similar to T. spatulativalva and T. curtisacca , but the forewing of T. uncaticula is brighter and the apex is less suffused with pink compared to the latter two species. The male genitalia are characterized by the valva strongly curved outward in distal 1/3, the slender anellus lobe and the short saccus. The female genitalia are very similar to those of T. spatulativalva and T. curtisacca , but the signum projections of T. uncaticula are all narrow triangular whereas those of other two species are broader and mixed with tongue-shaped projections.

Description. Adult ( Fig. 8E View FIGURE 8 ). Wingspan 9.5−10.0 mm. Head ochreous cream. Labial palpus ochreous cream, tinged with fuscous on outer surface; segment III shorter than II, fuscous at base and at apex. Antenna with scape ochreous cream, posterior margin tinged with fuscous; flagellum dark fuscous except basal 1/4 or 1/5 of dorsal surface ochreous cream, male cilia slightly longer than diameter. Thorax ochreous cream. Tegula ochreous cream, anterior margin dark fuscous. Forewing ochreous cream, strongly mixed with brown or fuscous posteriorly, anterior edge of costa black, termen broadly fuscous, apical spot round and moderate, below apical spot marked with pink, markings nearly identical to T. spatulativalva except apical area less suffused with pink. Fringe, hindwing and legs as in T. spatulativalva .

Male sternum VIII ( Fig. 23T View FIGURE 23 ). Approximately 1/10 length of abdomen, broad, sub-pentagonal.

Male genitalia ( Fig. 32B View FIGURE 32 ). Uncus spatulate, setose along apical margin. Gnathos hook short, simple. Tegumen approximately 3 times as long as uncus. Valva with basal 2/3 curved inward, gradually broadening; distal 1/3 spatulate, curved outward, sparsely setose, rounded at apex. Anellus lobe slender, approximately 1/3 length of valva, slightly dilated apically; apical bristle nearly straight, 1/3 length of anellus lobe. Juxta with a hummock-like broad process, sparsely setose. Vinculum produced posteriorly. Saccus short, broad at base, gradually narrowing toward blunt apex, not exceeding tegumen pedunculus. Aedeagus with basal 2/5 dilated, then uniformly elongate, distal 1/6 slightly narrowed, blunt at apex; a ventral tooth before apex.

Female genitalia ( Fig. 49D View FIGURE 49 ). Papillae anales heavily sclerotized except around medial setae, sharply pointed and hooked apically. Apophyses anteriores slightly shorter than apophyses posteriores. Tergum VIII very short. Sternum VIII broad, anterior margin concave at middle and strongly sclerotized. Ostium bursae broad. Ductus bursae broad at base, narrowing to colliculum, then gradually broadening toward corpus bursae, twisted near corpus bursae; colliculum near base, ductus seminalis arising from posterior 1/4. Corpus bursae small obovate, 1/3 length of ductus bursae; signum situated at posterior 1/3, with basal plate rounded, consisting of narrow triangular projections arising from the plate.

Distribution. China (Yunnan).

Etymology. The species name is derived from Latin, uncatus (hooked) and - culus, referring to the strongly sclerotized and hooked papillae anales in female.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Lepidoptera

Family

Gelechiidae

Genus

Thiotricha

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