Cassidinae (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae) types deposited at Sun Yat-sen University, Guangzhou, China
Author
Sekerka, Lukáš
Author
Jia, Fenglong
Author
Pang, Hong
Author
Borowiec, Lech
text
Zootaxa
2016
2016-02-24
4084
1
50
78
journal article
31387
10.11646/zootaxa.4084.1.2
4c9edcb7-571d-4edd-ab83-eb4d0797d6f6
1175-5326
1053949
E0CD195C-19E5-4A41-BAEF-9F6195640E8A
Sinispa tayana
(
Gressitt, 1939
)
(
Fig. 33
)
Rhadinosa tayana
Gressitt, 1939a
: 172
.
Type
locality.
China
,
Hainan
Prov., Wenchang, Qizhou Islands, approx. 19º52′–
20º00′N
, 111º11′–
111º17′E
.
Original
type
series.
Described only from the
holotype
(
LMNH
).
Type
material examined.
Holotype
, pinned: ‘
Hainan
Is.,S.
China
. | Put-ka-shan, Taya | Is. (near
Hainan
Is.) |
July 27, 1934
| C. I. Li [w, p, cb] ||
HOLOTYPE
|
RHADINOSA
[hw] | TAYANA [hw] | J.L.Gressitt [r, p + hw by Gressitt, cb] ||
RHADINOSA
| TAYANA | GRESSITT [w, hw by Gressitt, cb] || [vernacular name in Chinese, hw] ||
Sinispa tayana
[hw] | Gressitt [hw] | det. Li-Zhong Hua [in Chinese, p] 1987 [hw] [w, p, cb] || En-289768 | [Data Matrix barcode]
SYS
[w. p, cb]’.
Current status.
Valid species.
Remarks.
Würmli (1975)
transferred
R. tayana
to
Sinispa
and noted that it is questionable whether the taxon is distinct from
S. yunnana
Uhmann, 1938
, the only other taxon in the genus.
Sinispa
Uhmann, 1940
is quite distinct by formation of antennae as it has antennomere I with long spine, II unarmed, III with short curved spine, and IV– VI with two small and gradually shorter spines in combination with basally fused tarsal claws it is similar only to
Polyconia
Weise, 1905
, which differs in having all six basal antennomeres with spines.
Chen
et al.
(1986)
recognized both
S. tayana
and
S. yunnana
, as valid species and separated them by the length of the spine on antennomere I (reaching antennomere IV in
S. yunnana
or only III in
S. tayana
), number of rows of punctures on elytra (nine in the middle of the elytron in
S. yunnana
and eight in
S. tayana
), and length of the lateral spines on elytra (almost as long as apical ones in
S. yunnana
and slightly longer in
S. tayana
). We did not examine the
type
of
S. yunnana
however, according to the description the nine rows of the punctures are present only in basal 1/4 length and then are merged with other rows thus around midlength there are only eight irregular rows of punctures just like in the
holotype
of
S. tayana
. Other characters are quite likely subject to intraspecific variation and both taxa are possibly synonymous, however, we leave both valid until we have opportunity to examine
type
of
S. yunnana
.