Assara terebrella Zincken 1818
Creators
Description
Assara terebrella (Zincken, 1818)
(Figs. 2, 6, 9, 13)
Phyctis terebrella Zincken, 1818, Magazin der Ent., Halle, 3: 162. TL: Germany. Myelois terebrella (Zincken, 1818): Walker, 1863, 27: 34.
Hyphantidium terebrella: Ragonot, 1901: 75; Rebel, 1901: 23. Seneca terebrella: Inoue, 1954, 133.
Assara terebrella (Zincken, 1818): Roesler, 1973, 4: 145; Inoue, 1982, 1: 387, 2: 249; Sinev, 1986, 4: 319; Emmet, 1988, 231; Choi, Paek & Bae, 1998, 15: 28; Bae, 2004, 22: 33; Bae et al., 2008, 240; Kirpichnikova, 2009, 201.
Redescription (Fig. 2). Wingspan 18–22 mm. Frons covered with pale grayish brown scales; labial palpus with 1st segment white, 2nd and 3rd segment fuscous, 2nd segment with little white scales on inner side, about 2 times as long as 3rd segment; maxillary palpus fuscous, about 2/3 length of 3rd segment of labial palpus; proboscis grayish white at base; antenna fuscous; Thorax, patagium and tegula grayish brown. Femur of forelegs grayish white mixed with fuscous; tibia fuscous; tarsus fuscous, ringed with brownish white at tip of each segment. Midlegs with femur and tibia almost grayish white, mixed with few fuscous; tarsus fuscous, ringed with brownish white at tip of each segment. Hindlegs with femur grayish white; tibia grayish white, fuscous at middle; tarsus fuscous, with each tip of segment brownish white. Ground color of forewing blackish brown; antemedial line white and slightly dentate, oblique outwardly from costa; postmedial line white and waved; terminal line brown, interneural dots black; fringe fuscous. Hindwing dark grey; terminal line fuscous; fringe grey.
Male genitalia (Fig. 6). Uncus tongue-shaped, covered with hairs on dorsal part; gnathos slim, about 1/2 length of uncus, bulged at base, hooked at tip; transtilla connected at top, terminal margin flat, lateral part slightly concave; valva narrow at base, broad and rounded at apex, costa well-sclerotized, slightly shorter than valva, sacculus about 2/5 length of valva; juxta V-shaped, lateral lobes equal gnathos in length; vinculum U-shaped, with length same as width; saccus concave; aedeagus rod-shaped, about 2/3 length of valva, anterior part slim, middle part bulged, posterior part rounded, cornutus absent.
Female genitalia (Figs. 9, 13). Apophyses posteriores about 3/5 length of apophyses anteriores; antrum funnel-shaped; ductus bursae rather slim, about 2 times as long as apophyses anteriores; corpus bursae oblong, membranous, signum (Fig. 13) rounded, located posteriorly, formed by minute triangular sclerites; ductus seminalis from posterior part of corpus bursae.
Materials examined. 1 female, China, Prov. Jilin, Mt. Changbai, Dixiasenlin, 1700m, 29-VII-2000 (Bae Y.S. & Park K.T.), Slide No. UIK-2643, (INU); 1 female, China, Prov. Jilin, Mt. Changbai, Malugou, 730m, 17-VII- 2001 (Bae Y.S. & Park K.T.), Slide No. UIK-2638, (INU); 1 male, China, Prov. Heilongjiang, Yichun, Dailing, Liangshui, (N 47°00′ 48″, E 129°02′ 58″), 25-VII-2011 (Qi M.J. & Jin X.X.), Slide No. UIK-2821; 1 female, China, Prov. Jilin, Mt. Changbai, Erdao, Electric plant, (N 42°24′ 11″, E 128°06′ 04″), 7-VII-2012 (Qi M.J. & Liu J.), Slide No. UIK-2874.
Host plant. The family of Pinaceae: Picea abies (L.) Karst, P. excels Link, Pinus montana Duroi, and P. strobus L. (Roesler 1973).
Distribution. China (new record), Korea, Japan, Russia (E. Siberia), Europe.
Notes
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Linked records
Additional details
Identifiers
Biodiversity
- Family
- Pyralidae
- Genus
- Assara
- Kingdom
- Animalia
- Order
- Lepidoptera
- Phylum
- Arthropoda
- Scientific name authorship
- Zincken
- Species
- terebrella
- Taxon rank
- species
- Taxonomic concept label
- Assara terebrella Zincken, 1818 sec. Qi, Han, Park & Bae, 2014
References
- Zincken, J. L. T. F. (1818) Die Lineeischen Tineen in ihre naturlichen Gattungen aufgelost. Magazin der Entomologie, 3, 114, 133, 143.
- Walker, F. (1863) Crambites & Tortricites-List of the Specimens of Lepidopterous Insects in the collection of the British Museum, Part 27. Edward Newman, London, 286 pp.
- Ragonot, E. L. (1901) Monographie des Phycitinae et des Galleriinae. In: Romanoff, N. M. (Ed.), Memoires sur les Lepidopteres VIII. St. Petersburg, pp. I - XIV, 1 - 507, 560, pls. XXIV - LVII.
- Rebel, H. (1901) Pyralidae. In: Staudinger, O. & Rebel, H. (Eds.), Catalog der Lepidopteren des Palaearctischen Faunengebietes 2. R. Friedlander & Sohn, Berlin, pp. 1 - 70.
- Inoue, H. (1954) Pyralidae. Check List of the Lepidotera of Japan. Tokyo, 2, 120 - 196.
- Roesler, R. U. (1973) Phycitinae. Trifine Acrobassiina. In: Amsel, H. G., Gregor, F., Reisser, H. (Eds.), Microlepidoptera Palaearctica 4. Vol. 1. & 2. Georg Fromme & Co., Wien, i - xvi, 752 pp. & 137 pp., pls. 1 - 170.
- Inoue, H. (1982) Pyralidae. In: Inoue, H., Sugi, S., Kuroko, H., Moriuti, S., Kawabe, A. (Eds.), Moths of Japan. Kodansha, Tokyo, 1, 307 - 404, 2, 223 - 254.
- Sinev, S. J. (1986) A guide to the insects of the European part of USSR Lepidoptera. Part IV, Family Phycitidae. Opredeliteli Faune SSSR, 504 pp.
- Emmet, A. M. (1988) A field guide to smaller British Lepidoptera. British Entomological & Natural History Society, London, 288 pp.
- Choi, H. Y., Paek, M. K. & Bae, Y. S. (1998) Taxonomic note on nine species of the tribe Phycitini (Lepidoptera, Pyralidae, Phycitinae) from Korea (I). Insecta Koreana, 15, 23 - 39.
- Bae, Y. S. (2004) Superfamily Pyraloidea II (Phycitinae & Crambinae etc.), Economic Insects of Korea 22. Insecta Koreana Supplement 29. National Institute of Agricultural Science and Technology, Suwon, 207 pp.
- Bae, Y. S., Byun, B. K. & Paek, M. K. (2008) Pyralid Moths of Korea (Lepidoptera, Pyraloidea). Korea National Arboretum, Seoul, 426 pp.
- Kirpichnikova, V. A. (2009) Pyralids of the Fauna of Russian Far East. Russia, Vladivostok, Dalnauka, 518 pp.