Published October 16, 2024 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Catoptria philippinensis Leger 2024, sp. n.

Authors/Creators

  • 1. Museum fuer Naturkunde Berlin, Leibniz-Institut fuer Evolutions- und Biodiversitaetsforschung

Description

Catoptria philippinensis Léger, sp. n.

https://zoobank.org/ A6AADF26-E9E0-452E-9AEA-0BA9F26307C7

Figs. 48, 110, 166.

MATERIAL

Holotype: ♂ (specimen identifier coll.mfn-berlin.de_u_b2c391, DNA voucher MFNLEP-PYRALPHIL07-A09, genitalia on slide TL1066♂; BOLD sample ID PYPHI074-21, Genbank Accession Number PP196760). PHILIPPINES: Luzon, Mt Banahaw, Kinabuhayan, 17-19.03.2000, leg. Mey & V. Richter.

Paratypes: 9 ♂ (specimen identifiers coll.mfn-berlin.de_u_b95e98, e491f8, 2050dc, 1b2cf2, 78302c, c83b5d, 3b633b, 841b24, 4cf534), 1 ♀ (specimen identifier coll.mfn-berlin.de_u_d8bd7e) (detailed information in Table S1; https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.b8gtht7mh).

DIAGNOSIS

The arched, white antemedian line, the conspicuously arched postmedian line with indentation at dorsal 1/3, and the two conspicuous black marginal dots separate this species from other Catoptria species. In male genitalia, the costa is sclerotized, albeit without projection, and the sacculus forms a hook-shaped projection directed upwards. In female genitalia (Fig. 166), the papillae anales are not coalesced; the ostium is conspicuously sclerotized, with a Ushaped aperture; the ductus bursae is slender and membranous; and the corpus bursae is membranous, without signum.

HABITUS (FIG. 48)

Forewing length 7.5-9.5 mm (n = 5); ground color tawny to brown. Antemedian line white, starting at 1/5 of dorsum, forming a wide arch, meeting costa at basal 1/3. Median area suffused with dark brown. Marked white stripes along discoidal veins and 1A + 2A. Postmedian line originating at costal 2/3, conspicuously arched outwards, indented outwards at CuA2, then meeting dorsum at 3/5. Subterminal area with five white spots, interspersed with two black dots at CuA1 and CuA2. Apex with one large, marked blotch, white. Fringes dirty white to copper. Hindwings cream colored.

MALE GENITALIA (FIG. 110)

Uncus elongate, slender; apex pointing downwards. Gnathos projection slender, apex rounded, pointing upwards. Sacculus forming one quadrangular sclerite in basal half; second sclerite at valva midlength subtriangular, dorsally projected upwards into a slender curved sclerotized arm about 2/5 of valva length, extending beyond cucullus, with apex pointed. Costal sclerite up to valva midlength, devoid of dorsal projection, distally projected ventrally into subtriangular tip reaching sacculus. Valva curved upwards in distal half, apex broadly rounded. Juxta evenly rounded, with sclerotized edges. Saccus forming acute triangle, with anterior tip pointing upwards. Phallus slender, slightly curved, apex covered with tiny teeth.

FEMALE GENITALIA (FIG. 166)

Posterior apophysis about 5/3 of length of tergite VIII, enlarged at 1/6. Anterior apophysis reduced to bump. Ostial lobe forming broad spatulate plate and two tubular chambers; posterior margin broadly U-shaped. Antrum forming membranous pouch surrounding ostial lobe. Ductus bursae narrow, of medium length, membranous. Corpus bursae membranous, half as long as ductus bursae, corpus width ca 5/3 X length of corpus bursae, ovoid, devoid of signum.

DISTRIBUTION

Philippines: Luzon (Laguna, Mountain Province, Quezon), Mindoro. Collected at altitudes between 1150 and 1650 m.

DNA BARCODING

Two MOTUs were recovered in the species delimitation analysis, one from the unique specimen sampled from Luzon and another one from the two specimens from Mindoro. A maximum p-distance of 5.4% is observed between these two clusters.

REMARKS

This species is provisionally placed here in Catoptria. In female genitalia, some characters are not consistent with such placement: The ductus bursae is not sclerotized (anterior half sclerotized in most Catoptria species), and the corpus bursae lacks a signum (one signum is present in most Catoptria species). According to Błeszyński (1965), the southernmost occuring Catoptria species was C. pandora Błeszyński, 1965, known from Yunnan province in China. This species extends the known distribution of the genus well into the Oriental region.

Notes

Published as part of Léger, Théo, 2024, Half of the Diversity Undescribed: Integrative Taxonomy Reveals 32 New Species and a High Cryptic Diversity in the Scopariinae and Crambinae of the Philippines (Lepidoptera: Crambidae), pp. 1-93 in Bulletin of the Society of Systematic Biologists 3 (2) on pages 61-66, DOI: 10.18061/bssb.v3i2.9527, http://zenodo.org/record/15116964

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Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

Material sample ID
MFNLEP-PYRALPHIL07-A09
Event date
2000-03-19
Verbatim event date
2000-03-19
Scientific name authorship
Leger
Kingdom
Animalia
Phylum
Arthropoda
Order
Lepidoptera
Family
Crambidae
Genus
Catoptria
Species
philippinensis
Taxon rank
species
Taxonomic status
sp. nov.
Type status
holotype , paratype
Taxonomic concept label
Catoptria philippinensis Léger, 2024

References

  • Bleszynski, S. (1966). Further taxonomic notes on some tropical species. Acta Zool Cracov, 11 (15), 451-497.
  • Song, S., Chen, F., & Wu, C. (2009). A review of the genus Gargela Walker in China, with descriptions of ten new species (Lepidoptera: Crambidae, Crambinae). Zootaxa, 2090, 40-56. https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.2090.1.2
  • Bleszynski, S. (1970 b). A revision of the Oriental species of the genus Ancylolomia Hubner (Studies on the Crambinae, Lepidoptera, Pyralidae, Part 49). Tijdschr Entomol, 113, 27-43.
  • Bleszynski, S. (1970 a). A revision of the genus Culladia Moore (Studies on the Crambinae, Lepidoptera, Pyralidae, Part 50). Tijdschr Entomol, 113, 44-59.
  • Bleszynski, S. (1965). Crambinae. In H. G. Amsel, F. Gregor, & H. Reisser (Eds.), Microlepidoptera Palaearctica (Vol. 1).