Thyrocopa apikia
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.275119 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6226487 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C752BC31-7419-FFD5-2195-F902FE7AFCE7 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Thyrocopa apikia |
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6. Thyrocopa apikia nov. sp.
( Figs. 15 View FIGURES 1 – 15 , 71 View FIGURES 60 – 74 )
Holotype: UNITED STATES: HAWAII: Molokai: Pepepae Bog Trail, “Kamakou 4”: 1 3 (slide LA26), 6 Jul 2005, D. Rubinoff ( UHIM).
Paratypes: UNITED STATES: HAWAII: Molokai: Kamakou Pres., Pepeopae Trail: 2 3 (slide LA23), 19 May 2004, no collector listed ( UHIM); Pepepae Bog Trail, “Kamakou 4”: 1 3, 6 Jul 2005, D. Rubinoff ( UHIM); Olokui, 914 m: 1 Ƥ (slide MJM25), 3 Sep 1976, S.L. Montgomery ( BPBM).
Diagnosis: Of Thyrocopa on Molokai, T. apikia is much smaller than T. gigas ; is much bigger than T. minor ; has filiform antennae unlike T. decipiens ; has cilia only on the underside of the male antennae unlike T. geminipuncta and T. subahenea ; and has long bifurcations on the male uncus unlike T. fraudulentella . T. apikia is the only consistently very dark, medium-sized Thyrocopa on Molokai.
Description: Head: Scales brown. Antenna ca. 0.7–0.8x forewing length; dense, short, piliform cilia on ventral side of flagellomere in males, slightly longer and less dense cilia on ventral side of flagellomere in female. Labial palpus brown on second segment, light brown on third; third segment ca. 0.8x length of second. Thorax: Brown. Forewing length 14–16 mm; forewing ground color brown to dark brown to rich purplish-brown; very faintly darker spots sometimes visible in cell. Hindwing light brown; fringe light brown. Abdomen: Brown. Male genitalia ( Fig. 71 View FIGURES 60 – 74 ) with apex of uncus deeply cleft; sacculus knobbed and scoopedout in appearance. Female genitalia typical of genus; signum long.
Food plants: Unknown.
Flight period: At least May–Sep.
Distribution: Molokai.
Etymology: “ Apikia ” is a form of a Hawaiian word meaning “deceptive.” The specific epithet refers to the initial confusion of this moth with T. subahenea . The two have similar wing patterns and range, but their genitalia are very different.
BPBM |
Bishop Museum |
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.
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