Revisionary checklist of the Southern African Sesiini (Lepidoptera: Sesiidae) with description of new species
Author
Bartsch, Daniel
text
Zootaxa
2013
2013-11-26
3741
1
1
54
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.3741.1.1
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.3741.1.1
1175-5326
10099866
6B2E0F80-73A2-4F66-B1A6-2D9481EAAB74
Cicinnoscelis flavipes
new sp.
Figs 2–3
,
99
,
108
.
Specimens examined.
Holotype
:
♀
(
Figs 2–3
),
South Africa
,
KwaZulu Natal
,
Ndumu
,
12.Jan.1980
(
TMPS
).
The
type
specimen is somewhat damaged and partly off-rubbed and lacks the tip of the right antenna, the right fore- and mid leg, except for the fore coxa, and the tarsus of both hind legs, except for the left metatarsus. Despite to the mentioned damages this specimen is distinctive to such an extent, that no objective arguments against a description exist.
Etymology.
From latin
flavus
(= yellow) and
pes
(foot). The species is named after its yellow hindtarsus.
Description
(
Figs 2–3
).
Wingspan
48 mm
, forewing length
22 mm
, antenna
13 mm
, body without legs
21 mm
. Antenna bipectinate, rami with isolated scales and ciliae, ventral rami short and triangular, dorsal one rather long (
Fig. 99
). Body, legs and wings nearly completely black; frons black with adjacent of the eyes white; labial palpus, antenna dorsally and forewing distally of cross vein densely mottled with orange-brown; fore- and mid tarsus as well as hind metatarsus (probably complete hind tarsus) dorsally orange-yellow. The male is unknown.
Genitalia
(
Fig. 108
).
See genus description.
Diagnosis.
Cicinnoscelis flavipes
is an unmistakable species, singular within the
Sesiidae
by the bipectinate antenna of the female. It is very similar, but distinctly smaller than the following described
C. krooni
, which is one of the largest Sesiid species worldwide. The lack of orange-brown or yellow scales on the labial palpi, antennae, forewings and legs and most importantly, the simple, not bipectinate female antenna of
C. krooni
are further differentiating features.
C. flavipes
shows some similarity to
C. longipes
and
Megalosphecia gigantipes
, which both are distinguished by the stronger body, the somewhat transparent hindwing tornus and the largely orange legs.