The American species of the genus Glaucolepis Braun, 1917 (Neotrifurcula van Nieukerken, syn. nov.) (Lepidoptera: Nepticulidae)
Author
Stonis, Jonas R.
Author
Remeikis, Andrius
Author
Diškus, Arūnas
Author
Solis, M. Alma
text
Zootaxa
2017
2017-10-26
4338
3
489
506
journal article
31729
10.11646/zootaxa.4338.3.5
7d9d233b-0c6d-47df-90fe-198e71bd6954
1175-5326
1037020
A5F214A9-BD6F-44AC-93E5-B1EF2777E9AB
Diagnostics of
Glaucolepis
Braun, 1917
and the
flagellata
species group
Glaucolepis
BRAUN
,
1917
:
201
.
TyPE
SPECIES:
Nepticula saccharella
BRAUN
,
1912
:
97
.
Fedalmia
BEIRNE,
1945
:
207. THE SyNONyMy SUggESTED
By R. JOHANSSON
(UNPUBLISHED),
DISCUSSED IN SCOBLE (1983) AND PROVIDED By PUPLESIS
1985
:
11
.
TyPE SPECIES:
Nepticula headleyella
STAINTON
,
1854
:
298
.
Sinopticula
YANg,
1989
:
79, 81. THE
SyNONyMy By VAN NIEUKERKEN
&
PUPLESIS 1991: 202.
TyPE
SPECIES:
Sinopticula sinica
YANg, 1989
:
80
,
82
.
Neotrifurcula
VAN NIEUKERKEN
, 2016; IN VAN NIEUKERKEN
et al
.
2016
B: 36
,
37
,
syn. nov.
TyPE
SPECIES:
Neotrifurcula gielisorum
VAN NIEUKERKEN, 2016; IN VAN NIEUKERKEN
et al
. 2016B: 38,
39
.
There are many shared characters that support the status of
Glaucolepis
as a well-defined, monophyletic genus. A revised list of diagnostic characters for
Glaucolepis
is given in
Fig. 1
; many of these characters are hypothesized to be apomorphic. Like other genera of
Nepticulidae
, the genus cannot be recognized by external characters such as forewing pattern, which in this genus is variable across species. In the genitalia, the most distinctive characters are the long, rod-like sclerite of the phallus (which is expressed differently in various species, from an enlongated cornutus to a flagellum-like sclerite) (
Figs 25–34
), the apical spines near the phallotrema (possibly reduced in the
raikhonae
group), and the coiled ductus spermathecae (
Fig. 1
), a structure that appears to be of diagnostic value in the
Nepticulidae
. The combination of characters listed in
Figure 1
distinguishes this genus from all other genera of
Nepticulidae
. As is common in the
Nepticulidae
, morphology of head and leg structures (
Figs 2–7
) do not exhibit anything with taxonomic value. However, the wing venation (
Figs 8–18
) appears to contribute a strong diagnostic character: a trifurcate Rs+M in the hindwing venation is shared with the closely related
Trifurcula
Zeller
, while Rs+M is bifurcate in all other
Nepticulidae
.
FIGURE 1.
DIAgNOSTICS OF
Glaucolepis
BRAUN
(NOTES: 1
—
IT REPRESENTS A CORNUTUS, ONLy A VERy FEW SPECIES HAVE AN ADDITIONAL CORNUTUS AND ADDITIONAL TINy, SPINE-LIKE CORNUTI; 2
—
APICAL SPINES ABSENT ONLy IN THE ASIAN
raikhonae
gROUP (SEE DISCUSSION), POSSIBLy REDUCED; 3
—
UNCUS VARIED BUT IN gENERAL ALWAyS Y-SHAPED, PARTICULARLy EXTENDED LATERALLy IN THE
raikhonae
gROUP; 4
—
ONLy OCCASIONALLy THE APICAL PROCESS IS PARTIALLy REDUCED, USUALLy VERy DISTINCTIVE; 5
—
JUXTA ABSENT OR INDISTINCTIVE IN THE
headleyella
gROUP BUT PRESENT IN THE
raikhonae
gROUP (SEE DISCUSSION); 6—SIgNA IN THE
saccharella
gROUP ARE STILL COMPARABLE TO SOME DEgREE TO SIgNA IN SOME OTHER
Glaucolepis
(SEE DISCUSSION).
Larvae are leaf or stem miners. Some European species from the
G.
headleyella
group use more than one leaf, which is very unusual for
Nepticulidae
, and continue the mine from one leaf to another by moving through the petiole or stem (Johansson
et al
. 1990). Trophic relationships are still unknown for a third of the fauna, including all American
Glaucolepis
, except for
G.
saccharella
; however, the known host-plant preferences are rather peculiar (listed in
Figure 1
and briefly discussed in Doorenweerd
et al.
2016).
Lamiaceae
feeders prevail.
Annette F. Braun described
Glaucolepis
mainly on the basis of external coloration and wing venation (Braun 1917) and did not use genital characters during her early studies (Solis 1990). Sixty-seven years later the genus was illustrated and characterized using genitalia features by Wilkinson & Scoble (1979). However, the most comprehensive characterization of
Glaucolepis
, including numerous European species then assigned to
Fedalmia
, was provided by van Nieukerken (1986a) and Johansson
et al
. (1990), and later only briefly discussed by Puplesis (1994) and Puplesis & Robinson (2000).
The genus consists of at least four distinguishable entities, each with its own diagnostic characters, and referred to as species groups: the
headleyella
group (designated by Puplesis 1994), the
raikhonae
group (designated by van Nieukerken & Puplesis 1991), the
saccharella
group (designated by van Nieukerken
et al.
2016a), and the
flagellata
group. The
flagellata
group is designated here for the first time.
The diagnostics of the
Glaucolepis flagellata
group are based on male and female genitalia characters. From all other
Glaucolepis
, the group can be distinguished by the presence of a characteristically elaborated vaginal sclerite in the female genitalia. It also differs from all the
Glaucolepis
(including the
saccharella
group and the majority of the
headleyella
group) by the extremely long semi-external rod-like sclerite (cornutus) of the phallus and the absence of androconial structures on wings. From the
headleyella
group, the
flagellata
group differs by the presence of a distinctive juxta in the male genitalia; from most species of the
headleyella
group, usually by a larger vinculum and the absence of the so called “velvet patch” of raised androconial scales on the underside of male hindwing. From the
raikhonae
group, the
flagellata
group differs by the apical spines near the phallotrema of the phallus in the male genitalia; from the
saccharella
group it differs by the presence of CuA vein of the forewing, very elaborated bifid juxta in the male genitalia and reticulate signa in the female genitalia. So far the
flagellata
group is known only from the southern (Patagonian) Andes.