Agrisius leloii, Volynkin & Dubatolov & Kishida, 2018

Volynkin, Anton V., Dubatolov, Vladimir V. & Kishida, Yasunori, 2018, On the taxonomy of the genus Agrisius Walker, 1855, with descriptions of two new species from Vietnam and Laos (Lepidoptera, Erebidae, Arctiinae), Zootaxa 4459 (1), pp. 128-138 : 131

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4459.1.5

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:951081F8-5CEE-4E78-AFC5-0925284EF9EC

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5960969

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/039787C3-FF83-C777-FF59-FC0C8CB3F9E8

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Agrisius leloii
status

 

The A. leloii species-group

Agrisius leloii sp. nov. ( Figs 9, 10 View FIGURES 1–10 ) is very close to the A. japonicus species-group ( Figs 1–8 View FIGURES 1–10 ) by its external appearance, the long basal plate of the uncus with medial dorsal crest, the hood-like juxta, the absence of coremata on the apex of the valve (only longer hairs presented), the presence of only one, short saccular process, and the absence of cornuti and spinules in the aedeagus vesica, but the long distal branches of its uncus ( Figs 26 View FIGURES 21–26 , 27 View FIGURES 27–32 ) are very different from those of the A. japonicus species-group ( Figs 21–25 View FIGURES 21–26 ) and resemble those of the A. guttivitta species-group ( Figs 28–32 View FIGURES 27–32 ). However, in the A. guttivitta species-group those branches are not curved dorsoventrally and are pointed apically, whereas in A. leloii sp. nov. the distal branches of the uncus have the short and trigonal apical-dorsal processes similar to those of the A. japonicus species-group, but differ from the latter by the claw-like apexes, which are curved downwards (in the A. japonicus species-group they are curved upwards). The female genitalia of A. leloii sp. nov. ( Fig. 36 View FIGURES 33–41 ) differ from those of the A. japonicus species-group ( Figs 33, 34 View FIGURES 33–41 ) by the presence of a heavily sclerotized antevaginal plate, and from the A. guttivitta species-group ( Figs 37–41 View FIGURES 33–41 ) by the absence of heavily sclerotized antrum. Taking into account all listed genitalic characters, we treat A. leloii sp. nov. as a member of the separate species-group, which is morphologically intermediate between the A. japonicus and the A. guttivitta species-groups.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Lepidoptera

Family

Erebidae

Genus

Agrisius

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