The Paranthrenini of Mainland China (Lepidoptera, Sesiidae)
Author
Kallies, Axel
Author
Arita, Yutaka
Author
Owada, Mamoru
Author
Wu, Guo-Yi
Author
Wang, Min
text
Zootaxa
2014
3811
2
185
206
journal article
45621
10.11646/zootaxa.3811.2.2
b9d8b4a3-5c31-44fb-9f7a-ee81bfaa214c
1175-5326
229506
3EB522C3-C8F1-41A2-A576-E1FB296E3B25
Scoliokona
Kallies & Arita, 1998
This genus is currently known from a range reaching from
Thailand
and
Burma
in the west to the
Philippines
and Lombok in the east (Arita & Riefenstahl 2004, Kallies & Arita 1998 and unpublished). We here report it from
China
and
Vietnam
for the first time.
Typical species of
Scoliokona
show bluish black forewings and partly scaled hingwings. They differ from species of related genera by the structure of the antennae (short, not reaching the discal spot, only about 2/5 of the forewing) and the labial palps (broad, with short apical segment, otherwise rough-scaled, with long scales) as well as the size of the head (relatively wide, about 3/4 of the width of the thorax). The male genitalia differ from those of related genera by the short and broad valvae and the presence of a well-developed crista in the middle of the ventral surface.
Based on our current work, the following species are here transferred to
Scoliokona
:
Scoliokona phoenicia
(
Hampson, 1919
)
comb. nov.
(
Sura
);
Scoliokona cyanea
(
Hampson, 1919
)
comb. nov.
(
Sura
);
Scoliokona zygophora
(
Hampson, 1919
)
comb. nov.
(
Paranthrene
);
Scoliokona uncariae
(
Schneider, 1940
)
comb. nov.
(
Sura
). The placement of these species is tentative, as neither of these species could be studied in detail and the decision is based solely on the examination of images of the
type
specimens. The
type
material of
S. uncariae
appears to be lost (Marianne Horak, personal communication).
This hostplant of typical
Scoliokona
species is unknown. The hostplant of
S. uncariae
and
S. cyanea
is Gambier (
Uncaria gambir
,
Rubiaceae
) (
Schneider 1940
). According to
Meyrick (1930)
and in line with labels attached to the
type
specimens, Gambier is also the hostplant of
S. cyanogama
.