Triskelionia, a new African genus of the Celaenorrhinini (Lepidoptera: Hesperiidae) and the promotion of T. compacta to species-status.
Author
Larsen, Torben B.
Author
Congdon, Colin E.
text
Zootaxa
2011
2931
53
58
journal article
46543
10.5281/zenodo.278052
89803f24-d147-45a0-b77b-995f45bc0425
1175-5326
278052
Triskelionia tricerata
comb. nov.
The genus is defined by
T. tricerata
, the
type
species, and is characterized by a number of features that unite the two species, while differentiating them from other genera in the
Celaenorrhinini
tribe:
a) as already mentioned by
Evans (1937)
the palps are longer and the antennal club more arcuate than in
Sarangesa
, “approaching
Calleagris
”.
b) the three-pronged spot in the forewing cell is different from all other
Celaenorrhinini
(slightly similar in
S. seineri
which has very different genitalia).
c) the wing shape, especially of
tricerata
, is closer to that of
Eretis
than to
Sarangesa
.
d) the male genitalia are very different from any
Sarangesa
and show affinity with some sections of
Celaenorrhinus
. The uncus is small and pointed, without lateral side branches. The very large gnathos consists of two fully fused branches, forming an almost box-like structure, the external surfaces of which are finely ribbed and spined. It is proportionately larger than in any
Celaenorrhinus
; no
Sarangesa
or
Eretis
has this
type
of structure; at most the gnathos is composed of narrow branches that do not fuse. The vinculum continues narrowly to fuse basally rather than forming a regular, solid saccus. The shape and proportion of the penis is very different from
Celaenorrhinus
.
e) the pupa has no free proboscis-sheath as is the case in all known
Sarangesa
and
Eretis
, and which is very long in
Celaenorrhinus
, extending well beyond the end of the abdomen.
f) the larval host-plant is a member of the
Fabaceae
, not known as host-plant for any other African member of the
Celaenorrhinini
, although used by
Calleagris jamesoni
in the tribe
Tagiadini
and many species in the Odontoptilina (which should receive full status as a tribe and is very distant from
Triskelionia
and other
Celaenorrhinini
).
We attach special importance to the following characters: the longer palps; the large fully-fused gnathos structure; the lack of a free proboscis sheath in the pupa; and the use of
Fabaceae
as host-plant. None of these characters is found in any of the
Sarangesa
; each is certainly independent of any of the other characters. The simultaneous presence of four such characters is not compatible with retaining the species in
Sarangesa
.
Etymology.
The genus name
Triskelionia
refers to the unique, conjoined three-pronged shape (from Greek ρισκέλιον) of the fused spots in the forewing cell of the two species included in the genus (triskelion is colloquially called the “three-legged cross” in
Britain
). This ancient symbol was common on Mycenaean pottery from where it entered modern heraldry. It is used in the flags or seals of several modern territories or institutions, including the
Isle of Man
and Ingushetia. It is also the symbol of the Global Fund to fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, and is in use by the
US
Department of Transportation.
Triskelion
was preoccupied by a genus of extinct Eocene flagellate Protozoa in the order Ebriida; however, the name seemed so descriptive that a modification of triskelion seemed appropriate.