Anthozela chrysoxantha Meyrick, 1913

Razowski, Józef & Brown, John W., 2012, Descriptions of new Tortricidae (Lepidoptera) reared from native fruit in Kenya, Zootaxa 3222, pp. 1-27 : 9

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.280255

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6178554

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038987EF-FF92-FFE7-FF61-C6E739983C23

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Anthozela chrysoxantha Meyrick, 1913
status

 

Anthozela chrysoxantha Meyrick, 1913 View in CoL

Fig. 32 View FIGURES 29 – 33

Anthozela chrysoxantha View in CoL was described from South Africa. Meyrick (1936) reported the host as Pavetta View in CoL sp. ( Rubiaceae View in CoL ). We examined four specimens from Kakamega Forest, Western Province, 1570 m, 16 December 1999, reared from Tarenna pavettoides View in CoL ssp. triessiorum ( Rubiaceae View in CoL ), A&M Coll. #402, R. S. Copeland. According to Horak (2006), the female genitalia have not been described or illustrated previously, so we provide a diagnosis and description.

Diagnosis. The female genitalia of A. chrysoxantha ( Fig. 32 View FIGURES 29 – 33 ) are similar to those of A. hilaris ( Horak 2006: fig. 498) and A. bathysema ( Diakonoff 1984: fig. 38). They can be distinguished by the shield-shaped lamella antevaginalis, which is absent in A. hilaris and A. bathysema , and a pair of signa that are broader basally and more claw-shaped than the slender thorn-shaped signa of those species. The papillae anales are slender and unmodified; the apophyses are 2.25–2.50 times as long as the papillae anales, the anteriores slightly longer than the posteriores; the cup-shaped part of the sterigma (i.e., lamella antevaginalis) has a distinct shield-shaped sclerite with three small, parallel, lateral creases; it is separated from the indistinct antrum by membrane; the ductus bursae is slender, uniform in width, with a small bulbous swelling at the posterior end at the junction with the corpus bursae, from which arises the ductus seminalis; the corpus bursae is large, ovoid, with a pair of strong, curved, claw-shaped signa; an accessory sac is absent.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Lepidoptera

Family

Tortricidae

Genus

Anthozela

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