Ornilius rotundus, Zhang & Cong & Shen & Grishin, 2022
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.6392056 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/183DE44C-FF8D-FFF8-AFF9-F9B6FA8AC197 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Ornilius rotundus |
status |
new genus and new species |
Ornilius rotundus Grishin, new genus and new species
http://zoobank.org/ 6CAFDF62-38BE-465D-934A-D844A589F12A http://zoobank.org/ 926EC06C-982B-4811-9152-0270F924C028
Definition of the new species. This is the species Evans misidentified as Papilio cebrenus Cramer, 1777 (type locality Suriname) and called “ Salatis cebrenus ”. Thus, the diagnostic characters for it are given in Evans (1952), where the species keys out to D.2.3. Specifically, both sexes have wings rounder than most relatives, fringes not checkered. Males with yellowish hyaline spots on forewing, cheeks broadly white. Forewing of female with hyaline discal band of three spots well-aligned with each other, small roundish spot in cell M 3 -CuA 1 offset from the discal band and three well-developed (not one as in Salatis species) hyaline subapical spots. The COI barcode sequence of the holotype is:
AACTTTATACTTTATTTTTGGAATTTGAGCAGGAATAGTAGGAACTTCACTAAGATTATTAATTCGAACTGAATTAG GAACTCCTGGATCTTTAATTGGAGATGATCAAATTTATAATACTATTGTTACAGCTCATGCTTTTATTATAATTTTTTT TATAGTAATACCTAT TATAAT TGGAGGAT T TGGAAAT TGAT TAAT TCCTCTCATACTCGGAGCCCCAGATATAG CATTTCCACGAATAAATAATATAAGATTTTGATTATTACCCCCATCTTTAACTTTACTAATTTCAAGAAGAATTG TAGAAAATGGTGCTGGAACTGGATGAACAGTATATCCTCCTTTATCGTCTAATATTGCTCACCAAGGATCTTCTG TAGACTTAGCAATTTTTTCTTTACATTTAGCAGGAATTTCATCTATCTTAGGAGCTATTAATTTCATTACAACAATTAT TAACATACGAATTAAAAATTTATCATTTGATCAAATACCATTATTTATTTGAGCTGTTGGAATTACAGCTCTTTTATTAT TACTTTCTTTACCTGTCTTAGCTGGCGCTATTACTATACTTTTAACTGATCGAAATTTAAATACTTCATTTTTTGATC CAGCAGGAGGAGGAGATCCAATTTTATATCAACATTTATTT
Type locality. Brazil: Santa Catarina , São Bento do Sul, elevation 850 m, GPS coordinates −26.283, −49.417.
Distribution. The species is known only from the Southeast and South regions in Brazil.
Type material. Holotype ( Fig. 2a,b View Figure 2 ), male deposited in the National Museum of Natural History , Smithsonian Institution , Washington, DC, USA ( USNM), with the following rectangular white labels: || BRAZIL: Sta Catarina | Sao Bento do Sul | 26°17′S 49°25′W | 25.III.1990 | 850m, leg. Rank || GENITALIA NO. | X-5024 | J.M.Burns 2001 || USNMENT | [barcode image] | 00913850 || DNA sample ID: | NVG-17104 C01 | c/o Nick V. Grishin || GoogleMaps . Paratypes: 3 ♂♂ and 5 ♀♀ from Brazil: Espírito Santo and Rio de Janeiro in the Natural History Museum, London, UK ( BMNH), 1 ♂ and 1 ♀ in USNM and 3 ♀♀ in the ZMHB. Type identification labels will be mailed to curators of these collections to be placed on these specimens.
Definition of the new genus. This new genus is erected here to receive species previously included in Salatis Evans, 1952 (type species Papilio salatis Stoll, 1782 ), but not monophyletic with it and instead originating near the base of the group consisting of Bungalotis Watson, 1893 (type species Papilio midas Cramer, 1775 ), Sarmientoia Berg, 1897 (type species Dyscophus faustinus Burmeister, 1878 ), Salatis Evans, 1952 , Nicephellus Austin, 2008 (type species Eudamus nicephorus Hewitson, 1876 ), Salantoia Grishin, 2019 (type species Eudamus eriopis Hewitson, 1867 ), Fulvatis Grishin , new genus (type species Telegonus fulvius Plötz, 1882 ), and Adina Grishin , new genus (type species Nascus adrastor Mabille and Boullet, 1912 ) ( Fig. 1 View Figure 1 ). While the wing pattern characters are reserved to define the new species, the new genus is defined by male genitalia that are more likely to be the shared character for the genus if additional congeners are discovered. This genus is distinguished from its relatives by the following characters in male genitalia: uncus undivided, concave and narrow in lateral view, tegumen with two flanges about half of uncus length, valva nearly as broad as long, nearly square in shape, long process of sacculus reaching harpe, harpe twice as broad as long, its distal margin with irregular broad dentations. In DNA, a combination of the following base pairs is diagnostic: aly2487.42.4:G49 T, aly2012.14.3:G1592C, aly185.5.3:G934C, aly2012.62.1: T 90 T (not C), aly 1656.12.3: T 762 T (not C), aly 1656.12.3:A772A (not G), aly527.19.4:G150G (not A), aly294.11.1:A93A (not G), aly2202.33.1: T 40 T (not G), aly 1231.7.2: T 1033 T (not A), aly 1231.7.2:G1019G (not C), aly15220.1.1: T 537 T (not C), aly1603.69.1: T 840 T (not C), aly1139.65.13:C280C (not A), and aly1139.46.3:A70A (not C).
Type species. Ornilius rotundus Grishin, new species.
Species included in the genus. Only the type species.
Parent taxon for the genus. Tribe Phocidini Tutt, 1906 .
Etymology. The genus name is a masculine noun in the nominative singular, given due to the elaborate and embellished shape of the genitalia: Orn [atus] + ilius (from ilia: guts, groin, genitals, etc.). The species name is a masculine adjective proposed for rounded wings on the type species, more so than in most Phocidini .
USNM |
Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History |
V |
Royal British Columbia Museum - Herbarium |
T |
Tavera, Department of Geology and Geophysics |
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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