Review of the genus Aphanostola Meyrick, 1931 (Lepidoptera, Gelechiidae, Anomologinae) with description of 19 new species from the Afrotropical Region
Author
Bidzilya, Oleksiy V.
Kiev National Taras Shevchenko University, Zoological Museum, Volodymyrska str., 60, MSP 01601, Kyiv, Ukraine
olexbid@gmail.com
Author
Mey, Wolfram
Museum fuer Naturkunde, Leibniz Institute at Humboldt Universitaet, Invalidenstrasse 43, D- 10115, Berlin, Germany
Author
Agassiz, David
Natural History Museum, Department of Life Sciences, Cromwell Road, London SW 7 5 BD, UK
text
Deutsche Entomologische Zeitschrift
2016
2016-02-19
63
1
45
74
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/dez.63.7556
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/dez.63.7556
1860-1324-1-45
542B0277F89948ED8387EE760EEEF5A4
257DF232C0065A11B4628BA20283C6F1
575793
Aphanostola joannoui Bidzilya & Mey
sp. n.
Figs 22
, 23
, 53
, 75
, 75a
Type
material.
Holotype ♂, [
South Africa
] RSA, Mpumalanga, Hongonyi Lodge, S24°27,17', E31°4,56', 30.iv-1.v.2010, LF (Mey &
Kuehne
) (MfN). Paratypes: 8 ♂, 2 ♀ same data as holotype (gen. slide 28/12♂, W. Mey, 81/12♀; 82/12♂; 208/12♂; 209/12♀; 482/14 ♂; 383/14♂, O. Bidzilya) (all MfN); 1 ♂, RSA, Natal, Mkuzi, [15'sq NW cnr,
27 30'S
,
32 05'E
], 23-26.iv.1982 (Scoble, Laurenson & Kroon) (gen. slide 54/15, O. Bidzilya); 1 ♂, Punda Milia, K.N.S. Survey, 6-15.v.1975 (Potgieter & Scoble) (gen. slide 21/15, O. Bidzilya); 1 ♂, Pretoriuskop, 1.iv.1952 (
Vari
) (gen. slide 10/15, O. Bidzilya); 1 ♂, Malelane, 24.iii.1952 (Janse &
Vari
) (gen. slide 40/15, O. Bidzilya) (all TMSA).
Diagnosis.
The new species can reliably be separated from
Aphanostola antennata
sp. n.,
Aphanostola longicornuta
sp. n., and
Aphanostola alternella
sp. n. by the genitalia. The male genitalia are well recognizable by the large and broad sacculus. The female genitalia are characterized by the unmodified sclerite VIII in combination with the funnel-shaped antrum and the small corpus bursae.
Description.
Adult (Figs
22
,
23
). Wingspan 6.0-7.2 mm. Head, thorax and tegulae covered with grey black-tipped scales, frons off-white, labial palpus weakly up-curved, black with white apex, antenna in male thick, finely ciliated, antenna in female thin, scape black, other antennal segments black with narrow whitish rings at base, underside greyish; forewing grey densely suffused with brown along margins and particularly on apex, three very indistinct brown spots in cell area, cilia grey, brown-tipped; hindwing grey.
Male genitalia (Fig.
53
). Uncus as broad as long, weakly widened distally, posterior margin straight or weakly emarginated; gnathos weakly curved at
1/4
, wide at base, tapered apically with pointed tip; distal portion of tegumen rectangular, basal part broad, anteromedial emargination broadly rounded; basal part of valva comparatively broad, distal portion distinctly inflated, apex rounded, shortly ciliated; sacculus large, broader than distal portion of valva, with curved posterior margin; vinculum moderately broad, posterior margin without medial projections, postero-medial incision deep and narrow; saccus basally broad, then strongly narrowed, apex rounded; phallus gradually tapered, basal projection distinctly shorter than phallus, narrow, apically weakly inflated.
Figures 53-58.
Male genitalia of
Aphanostola
spp.
53.
Aphanostola joannoui
sp. n., HT, RSA, Hongonyi Lodge (gen. slide 208/12);
54.
Aphanostola namibiensis
sp. n., Namibia, Brandberg (gen. slide 107/05);
55.
Aphanostola brandbergensis
sp. n., Namibia, Brandberg (gen. slide 103/05);
56.
Aphanostola aarviki
sp. n., HT, Tanzania, Morogoro Town (gen. slide 2380);
57.
Aphanostola africanella
sp. n., HT, Namibia, Omatjete Farm (gen. slide 553/14);
58.
Aphanostola africanella
sp. n., Namibia, Okahanja (gen. slide 198/12).
Female genitalia (Figs
75
,
75a
). Segment VIII weakly sclerotized, rectangular, twice as long as broad, without modifications; antrum funnel-shaped, strongly edged; sub-ostial sclerite a transversely prolonged plate; apophyses anteriores moderately thick, distinctly longer than segment VIII; ductus bursae long, slender, papillated in middle portion; corpus bursae small, rounded; signum absent.
Variation. The antrum is variable in width.
Etymology.
Named in memory of the lepidopterist John Joannou (1949-2013), who participated in the collecting campaign around Hongonyi Lodge with the second author in 2010.
Distribution.
South Africa.
Biology.
The host plant is unknown. The adults were collected from late March to mid-May.