Amerila (Lepidoptera: Erebidae: Arctiinae) of Cameroon with morphological remarks on male and female genitalia
Author
Przybyłowicz, Łukasz
Author
Maicher, Vincent
Author
László, Gyula M.
Author
Sáfián, Szabolcs
Author
Tropek, Robert
text
Zootaxa
2019
2019-09-24
4674
2
283
295
journal article
25408
10.11646/zootaxa.4674.2.8
76ef5b8e-a344-4fee-b58c-5072d2a7f577
1175-5326
3459025
89B1826C-E5F7-43B5-820C-6439E791EE80
Amerila roseomarginata
(Rothschild, 1910)
(Figs 14, 29)
Material (
1 specimen
).
1 ♂
Mount
Cameroon
(SW slope),
1.ii.2016
,
PlanteCam
camp (
1,100 m
a.s.l.
),
N 4.1175°
,
E 9.0709°
, lgt.
V. Maicher
,
Sz. Sáfián, Š
.
Janeček, R
. Tropek (attracted by light)
.
Distribution
A very common species frequently collected across equatorial Africa. It is sparsely distributed from the
Ivory Coast
to the eastern regions of
Kenya
and
Tanzania
with some gaps most probably caused by the insufficient faunistic exploration in many countries. The present record (Fig. 14) is the first one for
Cameroon
, suggesting that the species might have a continuous range in tropical Africa. On Mount
Cameroon
, only a single specimen was collected at
1150 m
a.s.l. (
Fig. 1
).
Female genitalia
(Fig. 29)
Papillae anales subsquare, terminally covered with sparse setae; separated ventrally by a pair of elongated mem- branous protuberances, anteriorly from the oviduct; anterior apophyses moderate length, straight; apophyses poste- riores narrower, one-third longer than anterior apophyses; dorsal and ventral pheromone glands reduced; sternum VIII sclerotized, forming a pair of prominent, flat, subsquare protrusions; ostium bursae wide, membranous; ductus bursae much shorter than its width, membranous; corpus bursae forming an irregular pouch with two sclerotized, flat surfaces in the proximal section and extensive irregular signum bursae with numerous, sharp, elongate spines in the distal section, terminating in a small, papilla-like appendix bursae; ductus seminalis narrow, arising from the anteromedian portion of the bursa.
Remarks
Female genitalia have neither been described nor illustrated before. The species identity of the collected specimen is confirmed by the key characters of imago provided by
Häuser & Boppré (1997)
.