A revision of the subfamily Araeopteroninae Fibiger, 2005 in the Russian Far East and neighbouring countries with a description of four new species (Lepidoptera, Noctuidae)
Author
Fibiger, Michael
Author
Kononenko, Vladimir
text
Zootaxa
2008
1891
39
54
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.184345
30262dba-674c-47c7-9609-eec54cdff103
1175-5326
184345
Araeopteron ussurica
sp. n.
(
Figs.
9, 10
,
17
)
Material examined.
Holotype
, male,
RUSSIA
, Primorye terr. Gornotaezhnoe,
17
.vii.
1994
(V. Kononenko), genit. prep.
5869
M. Fibiger, coll. M. Fibiger (to be deposited in
ZMUC
).
Paratypes
:
1
male
, Primorye terr., Chuguevsky reg.,
60 km
E Zavetnoe,
24–26
.vii.
2002
(D. Nilsson & K. Larsen), genit. prep.
5747
M. Fibiger, coll. D. Nilsson.
Diagnosis.
A. ussirica
is distinguishable from other East Asiatic
Araeopteron
species by its small size; the whitish patches on forewing; the shape of the apically club-like sacculus; the low, hill-like ampulla; the short, broad aedeagus; and the narrow patch on the vesica, with many small cornuti.
Description.
Adult (
Figs.
9, 10
). Wingspan 9.5–10.5 mm. Antennae without lamellae, with scales. Labial palps strongly upturned,
3
rd segment 2.0 times as long as
2
nd. Head small, eyes large. Head, patagia, thorax, and ground colour of forewing and hindwing dark grey, forewing strongly suffused with white scales, especially at basal and costal area, hindwing powdered with many white scales; both wings with discal spots. All crosslines present, well marked, especially the medial shadow; terminal line on both wings prominently indicated by black interveinal spots. Underside unicolorous grey, without pattern. Colour of abdomen basally and apically grey, medially dark grey. Male genitalia (
Fig.
17
). Uncus relatively long, slightly and smoothly curved; membranous part of valva relatively short, broadest
2
/
3
from base, there smoothly rounded; sacculus curved ventrally, club-like apically, tip rounded; clasper fused to sacculus, with arched, low hill-like ampulla. Aedeagus short and broad, vesica with narrow spined patch, with many small, narrow cornuti. Female unknown.
Distribution.
Russian Far East, southern and central part of Primorye terr. (Fig.
38
).
Etymology.
Named after Ussuri, the biggest river in the Ussuri region [Ussuriisky krai]) of the Primorye Territory.