identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
014139E0A8DD4A0E48B5FF206E4FA1BC.text	014139E0A8DD4A0E48B5FF206E4FA1BC.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Circanota Brown	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p>Taxon classification Animalia Lepidoptera Tortricidae</p>
            <p> Circanota Brown gen. n.</p>
            <p>Type species.</p>
            <p> Circanota undulata Brown, sp. n. </p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> Circanota is superficially most similar to  Platynota Clemens, 1860, with a comparable forewing length and pattern, and long porrect labial palpi.  Circanota can be distinguished from  Platynota and all other sparganothine genera by the strongly undulate costa of the forewing in both sexes. Although females of a few species of  Platynota (e.g.,  Platynota flavendana Clemens, 1860,  Platynota rostrana (Walker, 1863)) have a slightly undulate costa, males typically have an evenly arched costa. Males of  Circanota lack the complex scaling of the frons typical of many, but not all,  Platynota , and the labial palpi of  Circanota lack pronounced sexual dimorphism; the palpi are conspicuously longer in the female in most Neotropical  Platynota . </p>
            <p> The female genitalia of  Circanota are represented by two distinct types. In the type species,  Circanota undulata sp. n., the anterior (typically cup-shaped) part of the sterigma, possibly homologous with the antrum, is broad and asymmetrical, unique within  Sparganothini . In contrast, in  Circanota simplex the structure is unmodified and similar to that of  Aesiocopa Zeller, 1877. The signum is long, narrow, and somewhat slender crescent-shaped, most likely homologous with that of  Aesiocopa Zeller, 1877,  Amorbia Clemens, 1860,  Amorbimorpha Kruse, 2011,  Coelostathma Clemens, 1860,  Lambertiodes Diakonoff, 1959,  Paramorbia Powell &amp; Lambert, 1986,  Rhynchophyllus Meyrick, 1932,  Sparganocosma Brown, 2013,  Sparganopseustis Powell &amp; Lambert, 1986,  Sparganothina Powell, 1986, and  Sparganothoides Lambert &amp; Powell, 1986.  Circanota lacks abdominal dorsal pits, which are present in  Aesiocopa , many species of  Amorbia ,  Coelostathma , and  Sparganopseustis . In the male genitalia of  Circanota , the uncus is long and slender, as in many other sparganothine genera (e.g.,  Sparganothis Hübner , 1825,  Cenopis Zeller, 1875) and in contrast to the spindle-shaped (i.e., broadened subbasally) uncus of  Platynota . The secondary arms of the socii are long and slender, more similar to those of males of genera whose females lack the crescent-shape signum (e.g.,  Sparganothis ,  Cenopis ,  Platynota ). The valvae of  Circanota undulata are highly modified, whereas those of  Circanota simplex are less so, although in both species the distal edge of the valva (the area between the termination of the sacculus and the termination of the costa) is membranous and somewhat lobed (much more pronounced in  Circanota undulata ). </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p> Head: Vertex relatively smooth scaled, upper frons with large, flat tuft of scales overhanging lower frons, lower frons smooth scaled without complex hood. Antennal scaling in two bands per segment, sensory setae 0.7-0.9 times flagellomere width in male, shorter, sparser in female; labial palpus moderate in length, segment II about 2.0 times horizontal diameter of compound eye in male, only slightly longer in female, weakly upcurved; ocellus well developed in both sexes. Thorax: Notum smooth scaled throughout; legs unmodified. Forewing length 4.9-6.1 mm, slightly greater in females; costa undulate in both sexes; costal fold present in male, broad and pronounced in  undulata , reduced and narrow in  simplex ; forewing without raised scales; R4 and R5 stalked in basal 0.6. Hindwing with Rs and M1 approximate at base, CuA1 and M3 connate, and M2 and M3 approximate at base; cubital hair pecten present in both sexes, slightly less developed in males. Abdomen: Dorsal pits absent. Female lacking enlarged corethrogyne scaling. Male genitalia with uncus long, slender, uniform in width throughout, curved ventrad apically; socius rather short, narrow, with slender line of sclerotization along inner edge, bearing long dense scales, secondary arm long, slender, not expanded apically; gnathos absent; transtilla slightly arched mesially, with few (  undulata ) or many (  simplex ) stout spines; pulvinus weakly developed; valva broad, short, with expanded  “notch” subapically (in  undulata ); sacculus narrow, confined to basal edge of valva, either simple, without free distal process (  simplex ) or undulate with a long, free, weakly curved spine at termination (  undulata ). Phallus long, slender and curved in  undulata , shorter, more pistol shaped in  simplex ; vesica with a field of about 25-30 short, slender, deciduous, asciculate cornuti. Female genitalia with papillae anales oblong-ovoid, slightly narrower anteriorly, densely covered with papillate setae throughout; apophyses about as long as papillae anales, posteriores slightly shorter than anteriores; sterigma a strongly sclerotized fig, flat along posterior margin, slightly rounded anteriorly, in  undulata with a conspicuous, angulate-rhomboidal mesal portion immediately before junction with ductus bursae (typically the cup-shaped portion of the sterigma), in  simplex simple, flat, unmodified; colliculum inconspicuous; ductus bursae uniformly narrow throughout, equal to or slightly longer than corpus bursae; corpus bursae round, entire surface with fine faint rounded punctations; signum a ribbon-like, crescent-shaped sclerite in posterior portion of corpus bursae; a tiny, membranous, pocket-like external evagination near signum. </p>
            <p>Distribution and biology.</p>
            <p> Circanota includes two species:  Circanota undulata from Costa Rica and Panama, and  Circanota simplex from Panama and Ecuador. Hence, the documented range extends from southern Central America to northern South America.  Circanota undulata has been collected from about 50-500 m in elevation, with a single individual from 900 m; and  Circanota simplex is known from below 600 m. </p>
            <p> Although the early stages of  Circanota are unknown, circumstantial evidence suggests that larvae may feed in leaf litter, as was hypothesized for the related  Sparganothoides (Kruse and Powell 2009).  Circanota undulata is not among the species reared during the extensive survey of the caterpillars of Area de  Conservación Guanacaste in northwestern Costa Rica (Janzen and Hallwachs 2014); however, it has been collected at light (n = 8 specimens) within the same study area. Because most  Sparganothini are polyphagous leaf-rollers (Powell and Brown 2012), it is assumed that larvae of this species would have been encountered if it was feeding externally on living vegetation. Although leaf-litter feeding is unusual within  Tortricidae , it is the main feeding mode in the Australian  Epitymbiini (  Tortricinae ) (Powell and Common 1985) and has been implicated as the feeding strategy in the Nearctic genus  Anopina Obraztsov, 1962 (  Tortricinae :  Euliini ) (Brown and Powell 2000) and the Neotropical genus  Sparganothoides (Kruse and Powell 2009). </p>
            <p>Barcodes.</p>
            <p> BOLD (Barcode of Life Database, Biodiversity Institute of Ontario, University of Guelph) includes sequence data for 12 specimens of  Circanota undulata but no specimens of  Circanota simplex . Of the 12 specimens, I have examined four from the ALAS Project (The Arthropods of La Selva) (Colwell and Longino 2006) (INBio) and three from Area de  Conservación Guanacaste (Janzen and Hallwachs 2014) (USNM). Five specimens from Area de  Conservación Guanacaste could not be located. The 12 specimens show genetic divergence of less than 0.1% among the samples. In neighbor-joining trees (based on COI) for all  Spaganothini ,  Circanota is portrayed nearest  Sparganothoides , consistent with many morphological features (e.g., the crescent-shaped signum, the presence of secondary arms of the gnathos, the absence of dorsal pits, minimal sexual dimorphism). </p>
            <p>Remarks.</p>
            <p> The male genitalia of the two included species are divergent in several features, in particular the shapes of the valva and the phallus, casting some doubt on their putative congeneric status. However, the two species are virtually indistinguishable in facies, including the most compelling synapomorphy of the genus (i.e., undulate  costa in both sexes), and the male genitalia share a unique combination of characters: a long, slender uncus; short socii with long, slender secondary arms (not expanded distally); and a membranous lobelike process at the outer margin of the valva. Both species also lack modified scaling on the frons in the male (which is present in many  Platynota ) and dorsal pits (which are present in many  Amorbia and  Sparganopseustis and nearly all  Coelostathma ,  Aesiocopa , and  Sparganopseustis ). On the basis of these characters, the two species are assigned to  Circanota . </p>
            <p>Etymology.</p>
            <p> The generic name is from the Latin  “circum” , meaning around, and the Latin  “nota,” meaning mark. It is interpreted as masculine. </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/014139E0A8DD4A0E48B5FF206E4FA1BC	Public Domain	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.		Pensoft via Plazi	Brown, John W.	Brown, John W. (2014): Circanota: a new genus of Sparganothini from the Neotropics, and its two new species (Lepidoptera, Tortricidae). ZooKeys 462: 125-134, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.462.7647, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.462.7647
E9362ECB201829EFD59D30736392F2CD.text	E9362ECB201829EFD59D30736392F2CD.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Circanota undulata Brown	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p>Taxon classification Animalia Lepidoptera Tortricidae</p>
            <p> Circanota undulata Brown sp. n. Figs 1, 2, 3, 5, 7 </p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> In  Circanota undulata the valvae are short and broad, the membranous distal edge of the valva between the termination of the costa and the median lobe of the outer margin is exceedingly long, and the shape of the sacculus is unique - long and undulate, ending in a slender free spinelike process. All of these features are in strong contrast to their condition in  Circanota simplex , which has a rounded valva that is bilobed disally, and a short, narrow sacculus lacking a free distal tip. The female genitalia of  Circanota undulata have an asymmetrical anterior projection of the sterigma (= antrum) that is lacking in  Circanota simplex . </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p> Male. Head: Vertex and upper frons uniform fawn brown, lower frons pale cream. Labial palpus fawn brown, paler on inner surface. Antenna pale fawn brown, slightly darker on scape. Thorax: Tegula and notum fawn brown. Forewing length 4.9-5.5 mm (mean 5.1; n = 6), fawn brown mixed throughout with pale orange brown, with faint, narrow, variable traces of slightly darker post-median and subterminal faciae, and a few short darker strigulae along costa; well developed costal fold occupying straight basal 0.4 of costa. Hindwing uniform dark gray brown. Abdomen: Genitalia (Fig. 5) with uncus long, slender, uniform in width throughout, hooked ventrad in apical 0.25; socius rather short, narrow, with slender line of sclerotization along inner edge, bearing long dense scales, secondary arm long, slender, not expanded apically; transtilla weakly expanded mesially with a single small median spine; valva broad, short, with costa short, well defined; an irregular  “notch” extending from distal end of costa to lobe-like process near middle of outer margin of valva; sacculus well-defined, confined to basal edge of valva, undulate with a long, free, weakly curved spine at termination, a rounded excavation between tip of sacculus and lobe at middle of outer margin of valva. Phallus long, slender, undulate, nearly uniform in width throughout, with phallobase slightly expanded; vesica with a field of about 25-30 short, slender, deciduous (based on presence in female ductus bursae), asciculate cornuti. </p>
            <p>Female. Head and Thorax: Essentially as described for male, except forewing length 5.0-5.9 mm (mean 5.5; n = 6) and forewing slightly darker overall. Abdomen: Genitalia (Fig. 7) as described for genus; sterigma a sclerotized fig, flat along posterior margin, slightly rounded anteriorly, confluent with an angulate-rhomboidal mesal portion at junction of sterigma and ductus bursae (typically the cup-shaped portion of the sterigma); ductus bursae uniformly narrow throughout, slightly longer than corpus bursae; ductus seminalis arising from ductus bursae ca. 0.33 distance from ostium to junction with corpus bursae; corpus bursae round, signum a ribbon-like, crescent-shaped sclerite, nearly uniform in width.</p>
            <p> Holotype. Male, Costa Rica, Heredia,  Estación Biologia La Selva, 50-150 m, 10°26'N, 84°01'W, 12 May 1999, INBio-OET [BOLD: TONA407-08; JWB-08-0133]. Deposited in INBio. </p>
            <p> Paratypes (11♂, 11♀). COSTA RICA: Alajuela: Area de  Conservación , 09-SRNP-101007 (1♂) [BOLD: BLPDF403-09], 10-SRNP-106423 (1♂) [BOLD: BLPDR798-10], 10-SRNP-106757 (1♀) [BOLD: BLPDS133-10], D. Janzen &amp; W. Hallwachs (USNM). Cartago: Turrialba, 17-21 Feb 1965 (1♂, 1♀), 13-17 Mar 1965 (1♂), S. S. &amp; W. D. Duckworth (USNM). Heredia:  Estación Biologia La Selva, 50-150 m, 10°26'N, 84°01'W, 10 Jan 1993 (1♀), 12 Mar 1998 (1♀), 14 May 1998 (1♀), 21 Apr 1999 (1♂), INBio-OET, 26 Feb 2003 (1♂), 23-29 Feb 2004 (1♀) [BOLD: TONA408-08; JWB-08-0134], D. Wagner (INBio). 11 km ESE La Virgen, 250-350 m, 10°21'N, 84°03'W, 16 Mar 2004 (1♂), 18 Mar 2004 (1♂), 20 Mar 2004 (1♀), 21 Mar 2004 (1♂), 7 Apr 2004 (1♀) [BOLD: TONA409-08; JWB-08-0135], INBio-OET-ALAS transect (INBio). 10 km SE La Virgen, El Ciebo Ranger Station, 450-550 m, 10°20'N, 84°05'W, 11-12 Feb 2003 (1♂) [BOLD: TONA406-08; JWB-08-0132], D. Wagner (INBio), 17-23 Mar 2003 (1♀), 21 May 2003 (1♂), INBio-OET (INBio). Puntarenas: Golfito, 25-28 Apr 1965 (1♀), S. S. &amp; W. D. Duckworth (USNM). PAMANA: Cabima, May 1911 (1♂), A. Busck (USNM). Cocle, El Valle, 800-900 m, 3-5 Jan 1988 (1♀), MacDonald &amp; Schiefer (MEM). </p>
            <p>Barcodes.</p>
            <p> In neighbor-joining trees, barcode sequence data from  Circanota undulata (n = 12 field collected adults) form a tight cluster with genetic divergence of less than 0.1% among the individuals. </p>
            <p>Distribution and biology.</p>
            <p> Circanota undulata is recorded from Costa Rica and Panama below about 900 m elevation. All the specimens were collected between January and May. </p>
            <p>Etymology.</p>
            <p>The specific epithet refers to the undulate costa of the forewing.</p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E9362ECB201829EFD59D30736392F2CD	Public Domain	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.		Pensoft via Plazi	Brown, John W.	Brown, John W. (2014): Circanota: a new genus of Sparganothini from the Neotropics, and its two new species (Lepidoptera, Tortricidae). ZooKeys 462: 125-134, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.462.7647, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.462.7647
FE4AE339620DDF85A41CB6EC922A34E3.text	FE4AE339620DDF85A41CB6EC922A34E3.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Circanota simplex Brown	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p>Taxon classification Animalia Lepidoptera Tortricidae</p>
            <p> Circanota simplex Brown sp. n. Figs 4, 6, 8 </p>
            <p> Diagnosis . </p>
            <p> Circanota
simplex
 can be distinguished superficially from  Circanota undulata by the much narrower costal fold of the male forewing, which is broad and well defined in the latter. Otherwise, the two species are indistinguishable. In contrast, the male genitalia are extremely dissimilar between the two: those of  Circanota simplex are much less modified than those of  Circanota undulata , with a simple sacculus, a more elongate-rounded, somewhat bilobed valva, and a phallus that is much shorter and more pistol shaped. The female genitalia of  Circanota simplex likewise are dissimilar to those of  Circanota undulata , with a symmetrical sterigma compared to the asymmetrical anterior extension of the sterigma (= antrum) in  Circanota undulata . </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p>Male. Head: Vertex and upper frons uniform fawn brown, lower frons pale cream. Labial palpus fawn brown, paler on inner surface. Antenna pale fawn brown, slightly darker on scape. Thorax: Tegula and notum fawn brown. Forewing (Fig. 4) length 6.0 mm (n = 1); fawn brown mixed throughout with pale orange brown, with faint, narrow, variable traces of slightly darker post-median and subterminal facia, and a few short darker markings along costa; male with costal fold weakly developed, occupying straight basal 0.4 of costa. Hindwing uniform dark gray brown. Abdomen: Genitalia (Fig. 6) with uncus long, slender, uniform in width throughout, curved in distal 0.2; socius rather short, narrow, with slender line of sclerotization along inner edge, bearing long dense scales, secondary arm long, slender, not expanded apically; transtilla slightly arched mesially, with several stout spines; valva short, broad, bilobed rounded distally; sacculus narrow, simple, confined to basal edge of valva, lacking free distal process. Phallus short, pistol shaped; vesica with a field of about 25-30 aciculate, presumably deciduous cornuti.</p>
            <p>Female: Head and Thorax: Essentially as described for male, except forewing length 7.0-8.0 mm (mean 7.5; n = 3) and forewing with pattern elements less defined. Abdomen: Genitalia (Fig. 8) with sterigma a narrow sclerotized fig; colliculum weakly developed; ductus bursae uniformly narrow throughout, about as long as corpus bursae; ductus seminalis arising from ductus bursae ca. 0.2 length from ostium to junction with corpus bursae; corpus bursae round, signum weakly curved, ribbon-like.</p>
            <p>Holotype. Male, Panama, [Canal Zone], Barro Colorado Island, 1-9 May 1964, W. D. &amp; S. S. Duckworth. Deposited in USNM.</p>
            <p>Paratypes (1♂, 3♀). PANAMA: Canal Zone: Barro Colorado Island, 1-9 May 1964 (3♀), W. D. &amp; S. S. Duckworth (USNM). ECUADOR: Pichincha, Tinalandia, 16 km E Santo Domingo de los Colorados, 600 m, 5-11 May 1990 (1♂), R. H. Leuschner (USNM).</p>
            <p>Distribution and biology.</p>
            <p> Circanota simplex is known from Panama and Ecuador, from about sea level to 600 m elevation. Specimens have been collected only in May, but that likely reflects sampling bias rather than a narrow flight period. </p>
            <p>Etymology.</p>
            <p> The specific epithet refers to the simple, unmodified features of the genitalia as compared with those of  Circanota undulata . </p>
            <p>Remarks.</p>
            <p> The single male from Ecuador agrees well with the holotype of  Circanota simplex , but the ventral lobe of the valva is slightly broader in the former. Until additional evidence becomes available, this slight difference is assumed to represent geographic variation. </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/FE4AE339620DDF85A41CB6EC922A34E3	Public Domain	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.		Pensoft via Plazi	Brown, John W.	Brown, John W. (2014): Circanota: a new genus of Sparganothini from the Neotropics, and its two new species (Lepidoptera, Tortricidae). ZooKeys 462: 125-134, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.462.7647, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.462.7647
