Taxonomic study on Scotiophyes Diakonoff from China, with the description of a new species (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae)
Author
Wang, Xin-Pu
text
Zootaxa
2009
1974
64
68
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.274635
be10a26d-262b-4564-a7f7-49894a98ee82
1175-5326
274635
Scotiophyes
Diakonoff, 1976
Scotiophyes
Diakonoff, 1976
: 74
.
Type
species:
Adoxophyes faeculosa
Meyrick, 1928
by original designation.
In the forewing, veins R4 and R5 are stalked to the middle, M1 is approximate to R5, and Cu1 extends from the subterminal portion of the median cell. In the hindwing, Rs and M1 are short stalked, and the remainder veins are separate. In the male genitalia, the tegumen is broad and triangular; the uncus is dilated at the base; the socius is small or fused with the gnathos; the terminal plate of the gnathos is bifurcate; the transtilla is long and sinuate; the valva is broad; the costa is sclerotized and reaching the middle of the valva; and the sacculus is broad with dorsal lobes. In the female genitalia, the median portion of the ductus bursae is coiled, with a small internal sclerite, and the signum is thornlike.
Diakonoff (1976)
pointed out that the genitalia of
Scotiophyes
differ from those of the
type
species of
Adoxophyes
in the following features:
Scotiophyes
has a long sclerotized costa of the valva and lacks a wrinkled disc;
Adoxophyes
has an atrophied costa and a distinct wrinkled disc of the valva.
Razowski (1987)
indicated that the systematic position of
Scotiophyes
is unclear, and he provided some putative autapomorphies for the genus. The closest relative of
Scotiophyes
remains unknown, but the fusion of the gnathos and socii may represent an autapomorphy. The genus may belong to a group of genera considered primitive Archipini. A fusion of the socii and gnathos also occurs in Sparganothini and some Eucosmini, but it is rare in Archipini. Hence, the systematic position of
Scotiophyes
is in need of further investigation.