A review of the genus Cyana Walker, 1854 from India, with descriptions of five new species and three new subspecies (Lepidoptera: Erebidae: Arctiinae: Lithosiini)
Author
Singh, Navneet
Author
Volynkin, Anton V.
Author
Kirti, Jagbir Singh
Author
Datta, Harvinder Singh
Author
Ivanova, Maria S.
text
Zootaxa
2020
2020-02-18
4738
1
1
93
journal article
23994
10.11646/zootaxa.4738.1.1
f0ba3254-67ac-4d33-a341-c71ff16c05f0
1175-5326
3672439
B29D53CB-4E0D-4A25-97EC-ED983730E8B2
Cyana obliquilineata
(
Hampson, 1900
)
(
Figs 33–36
,
176
,
249
)
Chionaema obliquilineata
Hampson, 1900
,
Catalogue of the
Lepidoptera Phalaenae
in the British Museum
2: 298, pl. 26, fig. 24 (
Type
locality: [
India
,
Sikkim
] “Sikhim,
1800 feet
”).
=
Cyana baolini
Fang, 1992
,
Sinozoologia
9: 261, 265, fig. 3 (
Type
locality: [
China
] “Xishuangbanna,
Yunnan
”),
syn. nov.
Type material examined.
Holotype
(by monotypy) (
Fig. 33
):
♂
, printed label “
Sikkim
1800 ft.
Feb. 1897
Dud- geon.” / handwritten label “
Cyana obliquilineata
.
type
♂
. Hmpsn” / printed round label with a red circle “Type” / printed label with a unique identifier “NHMUK010597938” (Coll.
NHMUK
).
Other material examined
.
KARNATAKA
:
1 ♂
,
Karnataka
,
Jog falls
,
20.XI.2014
, leg.
H.S. Datta
(
Coll.
NZCZSI
);
1 ♂
,
Karnataka
,
Yellapur
,
22.XI.2014
, leg.
H.S. Datta
(
Coll.
NZCZSI
)
;
WEST BENGAL
:
1 ♂
, Gopald- hara,
Mirik
,
Sikkim
(
H. Stevens
) (
Coll.
NHMUK
);
1 ♂
,
Gopaldhara
,
VIII.1918
(
Stevens
) (
Coll.
NHMUK
);
1 ♂
,
Gopaldhara
,
Darjeeling
, 3440–5800’ (
H. Stevens
) 15.VII.[19]18 (
Coll.
NHMUK
);
1 ♂
,
Gopaldhara
,
Darjeeling
, 3440–5800’ (
H. Stevens
) 17.VII.[19]18 (
Coll.
NHMUK
)
;
MEGHALAYA
:
7 ♂
,
3 ♀
, NE
India
, W
Meghalaya
, Um- ran,
33 km
N Shillong
,
26°06’N
,
92°23’E
,
800 m
,
14–23.VII.1997
, leg.
Sinjaev
&
Afonin
, slides MWM 34405 (
♂
), MWM 34406 (
♀
)
Volynkin
(
Coll.
MWM
/
ZSM
);
1 ♀
, NE
India
, W
Meghalaya
,
Umran
,
33 km
N Shillong
, H=
800 m
,
25°45’N
,
92°23’E
,
8–11.XII.1997
, leg.
V. Sinjaev
&
M. Murzin
, slide MWM 35693 (
♀
)
Volynkin
(
Coll.
MWM
/
ZSM
)
;
ASSAM
:
10 ♂
, NE
India
,
Assam
,
Pan Bari Reserve Forest
,
27°08’N
,
94°00’E
,
4–7.VII.1997
, leg.
Sinjaev
&
Murzin
, slide MWM 34511 (
♂
)
Volynkin
(
Coll.
MWM
/
ZSM
);
1 ♂
,
India
,
Meghalaya
,
Umatsar
,
15.IX.2014
, leg.
H.S. Datta
(
Coll.
NZCZSI
)
;
ARUNACHAL PRADESH
:
1 ♂
,
Arunachal Pradesh
,
Naharlagun
,
28. IV. 2016
, leg.
H.S. Datta
(
Coll.
NZCZSI
);
1 ♂
,
Arunachal Pradesh
,
Daporijo
,
7.V.2016
, leg.
H.S. Datta
(
Coll.
NZCZSI
);
1 ♂
,
Mizoram
,
Zamuang
,
14. IX. 2016
, leg.
Harsimranjeet Singh
(
Coll.
NZCZSI
)
.
Remark.
This species is rather variable in its size and shape of subcostal dark dash in the postmedial area, but the male genitalia structure is stable within its range. The
Yunnan
populations described as
C. baolini
have no genital differences from Indian, Nepalese and Thai ones and are conspecific to
obliquilineata
.
Diagnosis.
Forewing length is
12–14 mm
in males and
14.5–15.5 mm
in females.
Cyana obliquilineata
resembles externally
C. subornata
and
C. linatula
, but its males differ from those of the both similar species by the presence of a small concavity on the postmedial section of the forewing costa (in
C. subornata
and
C. linatula
the costa is smoothly arcuate outwards), and less curved postmedial line. Females of
C. obliquilineata
are very similar to those of
C. subornata
and
C. linatula
and can be distinguished by the slightly less elongated forewing apex and less curved postmedial line only. In addition, compred to
C. linatula
,
C. obliquilineata
has red ante- and postmedial lines (those are edged with black in
C. linatula
). The male genital capsule of
C. obliquilineata
differs from that of
C. linatula
by its narrower valva with a less angled costal edge and distal saccular process being slightly broadened distally (that is pointed in
C. linatula
). In comparison with
C. linatula
, the aedeagus of
C. obliquilineata
is much broader, the vesica is shorter and bears two large lateral clusters of robust spinules (while in
C. linatula
there is one subapical cluster of smaller spinules), and shorter distal diverticulum bearing a cluster of more robust spinules apically. In the female genitalia,
C. obliquilineata
differs from
C. linatula
by its shorter ductus bursae, more heavily sclerotized posterior section of corpus bursae having two bands of long robust spinules (whereas in
C. linatula
the posterior section of corpus bursae is densely covered with small spinules at the base of the appendix bursae), and smaller signum. The differences from
C. rudloffi
are listed in the diagnosis of the latter.
Distribution.
North East
India
(
Sikkim
,
Assam
,
Meghalaya
,
Arunachal Pradesh
) (
Singh
et al.
2014
), South
India
(
Karnataka
) (present study),
Nepal
(first record),
China
(
Yunnan
) (
Fang 1992
;
2000
, as
C. baolini
),
Thailand
(
Černý & Pinratana 2009
) and
Cambodia
(
Bayarsaikhan & Bae 2016
).