Leptidea amurensis, Menetries, 1859

Llorente-Bousquets, Jorge & Castro-Gerardino, Diana Jimena, 2018, Antennal ultrastructure of Leptidea Billberg, 1820 (Pieridae: Dismorphiinae: Leptideini) and its taxonomic implications, Zootaxa 4402 (3), pp. 401-442 : 414-415

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4402.3.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:05E1CFBA-B510-4860-AD7F-EA5814F19C0D

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3799936

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03FEE52B-0A23-9206-88C9-FBEB63E2F823

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Leptidea amurensis
status

 

Leptidea amurensis View in CoL amurensis Ménétries, 1859

ANTENNAL CLUB ( Fig. 6a, b View FIGURE 6 ). The length of the scaleless club is 416 µm in the male and 620 µm in the female.

ANTENNOMERES ( Fig. 6 View FIGURE 6 a–d). Both sexes have five scaleless antennomeres. The distal segment corresponds to two fused antennomeres; the male has a suture on the dorsal surface of the distal antennomere confirming the fusion. The antennomeres are depressed, and the l:w ratio is up to 1: 6 in the male and up to 1: 4.5 in the female. The scaled area covers one antennomere more in the dorsal surface than in the ventral. In the male, the distal antennomere ends in an acute area where there is a small ridge.

SULCI AND PSEUDOSULCI ( Fig. 6 View FIGURE 6 a–f). For both sexes we observed 4 central and 8–9 lateral sulci. In the basal antennomere of the female, there are no sulci or pseudosulci, only a few trichoid and chaetic sensilla scattered; the male basal antennomere have the trisulcate configuration. They are irregular, especially in the male where they appear disaggregated; in the female, they are aggregated. The central sulcus does not occupy the whole length of the antennomere, but approaches the proximal border ( Fig. 6a, b View FIGURE 6 ); the lateral sulci extend toward the dorsum from the second antennomere. In the male, there are some pseudosulci, whereas in the female they are absent ( Fig. 6c, d View FIGURE 6 ).

MICROTRICHIA ( Fig. 6 View FIGURE 6 g–i). We observed m1, m2, and m4. The st:m1 ratio in the central sulci is 1: 2 in males and 1:2.5 to 1: 3.7 in females.

TRICHOID SENSILLA ( Fig. 6g View FIGURE 6 ). These average ca. 19 µm in length. The number of sensilla in the central sulci is 20–38 in the male and 17–45 in the female. The total number is 156 in the male and 132 in the female.

CHAETIC SENSILLA ( Fig. 6h View FIGURE 6 ). These average ca. 31 µm in length. On each ventral and dorsal surface there are four sensilla, resulting in eight per antennomere. On the dorsal surface the chaetic sensilla are located toward the distal edge of the antennomere. In the basal antennomere of the female, there are up to six sensilla, and in the distal anternnomere up to seven. The longitudinal grooves of the sensilla show small rounded bumps.

BASICONIC SENSILLA. Apparently there are no basiconic sensilla in this species, or they are exceedingly rare.

AURICULATE SENSILLA ( Fig. 6i View FIGURE 6 ). These are 11 µm in length. They are scattered in the scaleless antennomere, and occasionally they are in the sulci; they are common on the ventral surface. On the dorsal surface they are scarce, especially in the male, and are located near the lateral sulci.

COELOCONIC SENSILLA ( Fig. 6j View FIGURE 6 ). We found sc1 and sc2, sometimes in pairs. They are located only on the dorsal surface of the antennal club.

OTHER SENSILLA ( Fig. 6k, l View FIGURE 6 ): In the scaleless basal antennomere there are campaniform sensilla, and at the apex of the distal antennomere there are a few styloconic sensilla without stylus.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Lepidoptera

Family

Pieridae

Genus

Leptidea

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