Two new peculiar species of the genus Katha Moore from China (Lepidoptera: Erebidae: Arctiinae)
Author
Volynkin, Anton V.
text
Ecologica Montenegrina
2022
2022-12-05
59
92
100
http://dx.doi.org/10.37828/em.2022.59.9
journal article
10.37828/em.2022.59.9
2336-9744
13240316
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:0E372FFF-5AC0-4DF0-8BBE-E0CD63F92ECD
Katha portokaloftera
sp. n.
https://zoobank.org/
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:
5F985C1A-2ACF-4964-AB89-6A3D7FB98FEE
(
Figs 4–6
,
17
,
22
)
Type material
.
Holotype
(
Figs 4
,
17
): male, [
China
, western
Sichuan Province
,
Garzê Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture
,
Huoqu River
] “
Tibet
| Menia | Hotschu- Fluss |
2500–3000m
Juni-August” / “Rothschild | Bequest | B.M. 1939-1.” / QR- code label with unique number: “
NHMUK010292498
” / “Slide |
NHMUK014331128
” (
NHMUK
).
Paratypes
:
1 male
,
1 female
, the same data as in the
holotype
, unique number:
NHMUK010292499
&
gen. prep. No:
NHMUK014331129
(female)
(
NHMUK
).
Note
.
Huoqu (=Hotschu) River is a small tributary of the
Yalongjiang River
in
Sichuan Province
of
China
. The
type
locality “Menia” is probably situated south of
Yajiang County of Garzê Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture
in the area
between Yalongjiang Range and Huoqu Range
(
S.-Y. Huang
, pers. comm.)
.
Figures 13–15
.
Katha
spp.
: male genitalia. Depositories of the specimens dissected: 13 and 15 in NHMUK (©The Trustees of NHMUK); 12 in MWM/ZSM.
Figures 16–18
.
Katha
spp.
: male genitalia. Depositories of the specimens dissected: 16 and 17 in NHMUK (©The Trustees of NHMUK); 18 in MWM/ZSM.
Figures 19–23
.
Katha
spp.
: female genitalia. Depositories of the specimens dissected: 19–22 in NHMUK (©The Trustees of NHMUK); 23 in MWM/ZSM.
Diagnosis
. The forewing length is 22.0–23.5 mm in males and 25.0 mm in the female. Both sexes of
K. portokaloftera
sp. n.
(
Figs 4–6
) are similar to
K. pratti
sp. n.
(
Fig 1–3
) but the male of the new species has a somewhat straighter costa than in the congener, whereas the female differs from
K. pratti
sp. n.
in the posteriorly more convex costal margin of the forewing, similar to
K. nigropoda
(
Fig. 10
), from which, however, the female of
K. portokaloftera
sp. n.
differs clearly in the deep orange colouration of the body and both wings, which is pale ochreous-yellow in the aforementioned congener. The male genital capsule of
K. portokaloftera
sp. n.
(
Fig. 17
) differs from
K. pratti
sp. n.
(
Figs 13, 14
) in the markedly broader valva with a longer and more gradually distally tapered distal saccular process. The phallus of the new species is shorter and narrower than in
K. pratti
sp. n.
(in proportion to the genital capsule size). The vesica configuration of
K. portokaloftera
sp. n.
is significantly different from
K. pratti
sp. n.
and most similar to
K. magnata
(
Fig. 18
), from which the new species differs in the broader proximal section of the vesica lacking the subbasal diverticulum but bearing an area of graniculi, the markedly longer 1
st
medial diverticulum, the broader 2
nd
medial diverticulum, and the markedly shorter distal section of the vesica with a somewhat longer 1
st
distal diverticulum, and the longer and narrower 2
nd
distal diverticulum bearing a serrulate sclerotised terminal plate whereas in
K. magnata
, the 2
nd
distal diverticulum is distally heavily granulose. The female genitalia of
K. portokaloftera
sp. n.
(
Fig. 22
) are vaguely reminiscent of
K. pratti
sp. n.
(
Fig. 19
) but distinguished by the presence of the second sclerotised and rugose postero-lateral diverticulum of the corpus bursae positioned medially-posteriorly, the shorter and sack-like corpus bursae (it is anteriorly tapered in the congener), and the ductus seminalis originating from the sclerotised and rugose appendix bursae positioned postero-laterally on the left side whereas in
K. pratti
sp. n.
, the appendix bursae is vestigial and the ductus seminalis originates anteriorly-laterally from the corpus bursae.
Distribution
. The new species is currently known only from its
type
locality in western
Sichuan Province
of
China
.
Etymology
. The specific epithet originates from the Greek ‘πορτοκαλόφτερος’ meaning ‘orange winged’ and refers to the external appearance of the new species.