A taxonomic revision of the genus Edosa Walker, 1886 from China (Lepidoptera, Tineidae, Perissomasticinae)
Author
Yang, Linlin
Author
Wang, Shuxia
Author
Li, Houhun
text
Zootaxa
2014
3777
1
1
102
journal article
46239
10.11646/zootaxa.3777.1.1
bafe471a-9324-4c5c-82f4-ee0a18931dc8
1175-5326
249826
AD9C21E1-A326-49F0-93BF-FE6BDCEDF256
Edosa
Walker, 1866
Edosa
Walker, 1866
: 1818
.
Type
species:
Edosa hemichrysella
Walker, 1866
: 1819
, by monotypy. [Java].
Chrysoryctis
Meyrick, 1886
: 530
.
Type
species:
Oecophora irruptella
Walker, 1864
: 686
, by subsequent designation by
Fletcher, 1929
. [
Australia
]. Synonymized by
Robinson & Nielsen, 1993
: 193
.
Episcardia
Ragonot, 1895
: 105
.
Type
species:
Psecadia lardatella
Lederer, 1858
, by monotypy. [
Syria
] Synonymized by
Robinson & Nielsen, 1993
: 193
.
Cylicobathra
Meyrick, 1920: 99
.
Type
species:
Cylicobathra chionarga
Meyrick, 1920
, by original designation and monotypy. [
Kenya
]. Synonymized by
Robinson, 2008a
: 346
.
Sphallesthasis
Gozmány, 1959
: 347
.
Type
species:
Sphallesthasis similis
Gozmány, 1959
, by original designation. [
Afghanistan
]. Synonymized by
Robinson & Nielsen, 1993
: 193
.
Phalloscardia
Gozmány, 1966a
: 62
.
Type
species:
Tinea semiumbrata
Meyrick, 1920
, by original designation and monotypy. [
Kenya
]. Synonymized by
Robinson, 2008a
: 346
.
Bilobatana
Zagulajev, 1975
: 250
[as subgenus].
Type
species:
Tinea caerulipennis
Erschoff, 1874
, by original designation. [
Iran
] Synonymized by
Robinson and Nielsen, 1993
: 193
.
Neoepiscardia
Petersen & Gaedike, 1982
: 336
.
Type
species:
Neoepiscardia islamella
Petersen and Gaedike, 1982
, by original designation. [
Saudi Arabia
]. Synonymized by
Robinson, 2008a
: 346
.
Diagnosis.
Species of
Edosa
are small to medium size, usually colored brown.
Edosa
is characterized by the combination of the following characters: the antenna extending 0.7–0.9× length of the forewing, the scape slightly expanded and bearing a few black pecten bristles; the labial palpus three-segmented, the second segment with a few lateral bristles, the third segment with vom-Rath organ near apex; the maxillary palpus usually five-segmented, elongate; the forewing usually unicolorous, in various shades of brown, with individual scales dark-tipped in almost all species, usually dark along basal 1/3 or 2/3 of costa; all veins present; the cell of forewing elongate, with faint trace of chorda and branched M; the cell of hindwing with weak trace of forked M; the foretibial epiphysis present, the tarsi with a few scattered spines; the small coremata of eighth segment in male with spicular scales in most species, the vinculum fused with tegumen, the gnathos and saccus absent, the uncus with a broad, shouldered base and always bilobed, the cylindrical aedeagus without a cornutus and the bulbus ejaculatorius with distal section abruptly differentiated into a ‘cup’ in the male genitalia; the membrane between the seventh and eighth segments with a large invaginated tripartite corethrogyne, the ductus bursae or the posterior part of the corpus bursae possessing a complex colliculum in the female genitalia.
Edosa
shares some similarities with other Perissomasticine genera, but can be recognized by the genital characters. In the male genitalia, the tegumen is strongly reflexed caudally in both
Perissomastix
Warren
et
Rothschild, 1905
and
Ectabola
Gozmány, 1966
, but not in
Edosa
(
Robinson 2008a
)
; the uncus has a broad, shouldered base articulated with the tegumen in
Edosa
, whereas the uncus is not extended basally and indistinguishable from the tegumen in
Perissomastix
,
Ectabola
and
Hyperbola
Gozmány, 1965
; the uncus is always bilobed in
Edosa
, but fused, hooked (subgenus
Lazocatena
Gozmány, 1959
) or with a lateral prong (subgenus
Perissomastix
), or with a ventral lobe and a dorsal appendage (subgenus
Psolarcha
Meyrick, 1933
) in
Perissomastix
, fused dorsally, with robust spines and spiniform scales in
Ectabola
, and bearing short, dark pegs apically in
Hyperbola
. In the female genitalia, the ovipositor is shorter and broader, the anal papillae are larger in
Perissomastix
and
Ectabola
than in
Edosa
; the apophyses posteriores subtend a pair of hairy pads in
Perissomastix
, but not in
Edosa
; the complex colliculum is always present in
Edosa
, but barely so in other genera, represented only by one or two minute spines if present.
Biology
. Little is known about the biology of
Edosa
.
Meyrick (1934)
mentioned that larvae of
E. subochraceella
(
Walsingham, 1886
)
were ‘found several times in the empty bags of big
Psychidae
species’ in Guangzhou Province,
China
.
Robinson (1985b)
regarded this as an anomalous or erroneous record or, at least, an atypical life-history, since extensive rearing of
Psychidae
in many parts of the world failed to produce further
Edosa
.
Robinson (2008a)
mentioned that
Edosa
‘has a life history that is utterly opaque’, and suspected that ‘the larvae inhabit a niche that is somewhat unusual and not sampled routinely using techniques that retrieve small to medium-sized
Lepidoptera
larvae’.
Distribution
. Palearctic Region, Oriental Region, Afrotropical Region and
Australia
Region.