Molytria Stål, 1874
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.35929/RSZ.0011 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5743451 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E000E778-621A-8F74-3A0B-F98EFBB4FC76 |
treatment provided by |
Carolina |
scientific name |
Molytria Stål, 1874 |
status |
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Genus Molytria Stål, 1874 View in CoL
Type species: Epilampra inquinata Stål, 1860 View in CoL , by monotypy.
Remarks: This genus was originally monotypic and established for Epilampra inquinata from Sidney, Australia ( Stål, 1860). The original diagnosis of the genus was based on the structure of the hind tarsus: “planta nuda articuli primi tarsorum posticorum per magnam partem articuli extensa” ( Stål, 1874: 12). Later two additional species were described: M. perplexa Shelford, 1910 from Victoria, Gippsland ( Shelford, 1910) and M. vegranda Roth, 1999 from New South Wales ( Roth, 1999). The genus was reviewed by L. Roth (1999). The wing venation of a Molytria sp. was illustrated in details by Cui et al. (2018).
The genus Molytria is similar to the genus Morphna in the presence of large euplantulae along the lower margin of the hind tarsi and in the structure of its female genitalia, i.e. widely rounded and medially divided basivalvula ( Figs 23-24 View Figs 21-24 cf. Anisyutkin, 2018a: figs 21- 23) and vestibular sclerite with median outgrowth and lateral branches ( Fig. 23 View Figs 21-24 cf. Anisyutkin, 2018a: figs 21- 24). The short-winged species from India and Sri Lanka [ Morphna decolyi ( Bolivar, 1897) , M. indica Anisyutkin , in Anisyutkin & Yushkova, 2017 and M. srilankensis Anisyutkin , in Anisyutkin & Yushkova, 2017] are in their habitus very similar to females of the genus Molytria . However, both genera can be distinguished by the presence of two distinct rows of spines in the basal part of the metatarsus in Molytria ( Figs 25-26 View Figs 25-35 ; these spines are absent or vestigial in Morphna ) and by the absence of a dorsal outgrowth in the apical part of sclerite L2D of the male genitalia in Molytria [ Fig. 32 View Figs 25-35 ; this structure is present in representatives of Morphna (see Anisyutkin, 2018a: figs 34-39)].
Species included: Three species from Australia (South Australia, New South Wales, Victoria and Tasmania), as given in Beccaloni (2014).
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