Three new taxa of Noctuidae from China (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae)
Author
Gyulai, Péter
Author
Saldaitis, Aidas
text
Zootaxa
2017
4311
2
292
300
journal article
32328
10.11646/zootaxa.4311.2.12
bad9080b-242a-4ff4-8709-9739f9246b94
1175-5326
847466
0FE45560-BEA6-4954-B632-C4FD155F4BAE
Subleuconycta sola
,
sp. nov.
(
Figs. 1
,
13
)
Holotype
:
Male
(
Fig. 1
),
China
, W.
Sichuan
, road
Yaan
/
Kangding
,
Erlang Shan Mt.
, H
–
2200 m
, N29°87’340”,
E102°30’
970”,
2.vii.2011
,
Floriani
&
Saldaitis
leg., slide
No.
PGY
2935m
(coll.
PGM
, later will be deposited in the
HNHM
).
Diagnosis.
Subleuconycta sola
(
Fig. 1
) is easily distinguishable from its three congeners both by external and genitalia features. By the single known specimen, it is the largest within the genera, wingspan
38 mm
, versus those of
Subleuconycta palshkovi
(
Filipjev, 1937
)
(
Fig. 2
)
31–33 mm
,
Subleuconycta sugii
Boursin, 1962
with
33–37 mm
, and
Subleuconycta calonesiota
Kiss, Wu & Matov, 2017
(
Fig. 3
) with
33–35 mm
. Externally, only
S. palshkovi
(
Fig 2
) and
S. calonesiota
(
Fig 3
) resemble the new species. Beside the somewhat larger size,
S. sola
can be easily distinguished from
S. palshkovi
by its much stronger, longer, black streak between the orbicular and reniform stigma in the forewings, and the evenly brownish suffused whitish hindwings, with much prominent discal spot. From
S. calonesiota
, the new species differs in the shorter, less expanded black streak between the orbicular and reniform stigma, not exceeding the reniform stigma below, and the less contrasting forewing pattern, with less discernible, mostly conjectural transversal crosslines in the forewings; the darker, evenly brownish suffused hindwings with more prominent discal spot and less conspicuous medial line. The separation is easier from both of
S. palshkovi
(
Fig. 14
) and
S. calonesiota
(
Fig. 15
) by the comparison of the male genitalia.
Subleuconycta sola
(
Fig. 13
) has evenly broader valvae, broader corona and the most pointed saccular processus; in the vesica it has the largest, most prominent basal diverticulum, while the subterminal diverticulum lacks the cornuti field, being only slightly sclerotised–setosed; additionally, the new species has much longer uncus than in
S.
calonesiota
and somewhat longer than in
S. palshkovi
. Some of the external characters of
S. sola
sp. nov.
(considerably finer, slenderer body; much stronger and expanded black streak between the orbicular and reniform macules and whitish ground coloured forewing, etc.), as well as some of the genitalia features (much longer uncus, basally with half width saccular extension) are so distinctive from the greyish brown coloured Taiwan
S. sugii
, the third described taxa of the genus, (figured in the revision of
Kiss
et al.
2017
), that confusion is impossible. The correct identification is supported by the distributional pattern of the four congeners.
Subleuconycta palshkovi
have the widest range, known from the Russian Far East, Northeast China, Korean Peninsula and Japan (
Kiss
et al.
2017
), when
S. calonesiota
and
S. sugii
are endemic to Taiwan, whereas
S. sola
is known only from Sichuan.
Description
(
Fig. 1
). Wingspan
38 mm
, length of forewing
17 mm
. Antennae are filiform, basally white, distally brown; the frons whitish, collar brown, slightly whitish outlined; patagia whitish, brown outlined, being in connection with the three brown crossing lines of the whitish thorax. The vesture of the body and the ground colour of the forewings are grey and brown suffused whitish, however somewhat darker in the basal area. The most remarkable external features of the new species are the forewing with somewhat elongated but not pointed apex; the incompletely defined, but from the ground colour somewhat lighter orbicular and reniform stigmata with brown patch and a very conspicuous black streak between them, of which the inner end forms an asymmetric lying “V”, edging the orbicular spot, while the distal end is pointed below the reniform stigma; the more or less black outlined, double zigzagged basal line; the crenellate, mostly conjectural antemedial and postmedial crosslines; the interrupted subterminal line, formed by whitish small arrowhead–like spots and the blackish slight patches in the costa. The hindwing evenly brown suffused in which the cellular spot brown, well discernible, the medial (postdiscal) line diffuse. The underside of forewing brownish with the shade of the black streak between the spots, while the hindwing whitish with conspicuous brown shade of the cellular spot and the medial line.
The male genitalia (
Fig. 13
) can be characterized by the rather long, evenly thin, straight, hooked uncus, apically with pointed tip; developed, elongated tegumen; broadly subdeltoidal juxta, laterally the broadest and pointed, dorsally with two slight appendages; V–shaped vinculum; the absence of the harpe; distally somewhat dorsally curved valvae, with almost parallel margins, conspicuous, long, apically pointed saccular process and broad corona; medially sicker, distally enlarged and more sclerotized aedeagus with two sclerotized distal bars inside and ample, membranous, somewhat dorsally everted vesica with a large prominent basal diverticulum and a subterminal diverticulum lacking the cornuti field, being only slightly sclerotised–setosed.
Biology and distribution.
The new species is known from the Erlang Shan, at the eastern edge of the Tibetan plateau in China's
Sichuan province
. A single male was collected at ultraviolet light on beginning of July at altitude ranging
2200 m
. The new species was collected in virgin mixed forest habitat dominated by various broad–leaved trees such as oaks (
Quercus dentata
Thunberg
,
Quercus glauca
Thunberg
), poplars (
Populus cathayana
Rehder
,
Populus simonii
Carrière
), elm (
Ulmus parvifolia
Jacquin
), rhododendrons (
Rhododendron brachycarpum
G. Don
,
Rhododendron dauricum
Linnaeus
), and bamboos (
Phyllostachys
ssp.,
Borinda
ssp.,
Fargesia
spp.).
Etymology.
The new species is named “
sola
”, which means in Latin single, due to the fact that it was the single specimen in that well known locality at Erlang Shan mountains.