Diagnostics and updated checklist of Oriental Pseudopostega (Opostegidae) including the matrona species group with a new, extralimital species discovered in the Mediterranean
Author
Stonis, Jonas R.
Nature Research Centre, Akademijos St. 2, LT- 08412, Vilnius, Lithuania.
Author
Remeikis, Andrius
0000-0002-9310-1112
Nature Research Centre, Akademijos St. 2, LT- 08412, Vilnius, Lithuania. & remeikis. andrew @ gmail. com; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 9310 - 1112
remeikis.andrew@gmail.com
Author
Solis, M. Alma
0000-0001-6379-1004
Systematic Entomology Laboratory, ARS, USDA, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D. C., 20013 - 7012, USA. & alma. solis @ usda. gov; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0001 - 6379 - 1004
alma.solis@usda.gov
Author
Karsholt, Ole
0000-0002-6969-2549
Zoological Museum, Natural History Museum of Denmark, Universitetsparken 15, 2100 KØbenhavn Ø, Denmark. & okarsholt @ snm. ku. dk; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 6969 - 2549
okarsholt@snm.ku.dk
text
Zootaxa
2021
2021-02-22
4933
3
341
360
journal article
7980
10.11646/zootaxa.4933.3.3
64bf7928-3aae-4bea-9b2e-c540760818b1
1175-5326
4554946
02FB8898-619D-4766-BB79-0E67F25DD9AF
Pseudopostega matrona
Karsholt & Remeikis
,
sp. nov.
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:
C615037C-7B30-4194-9EBE-753415C33E73
Type material.
Holotype
: ♂,
TURKEY
,
40 km
NE of
Antalya
, road to
Köprülü Canyon
,
National Park
, alt.
200 m
,
28–29.iv.1993
,
Karsholt
leg., genitalia slide no. RA1084 (
ZMUC
)
.
Paratypes
: 2 ♂, same collection data as for holotype, genitalia slide nos RA1083, Karsholt5083 (
ZMUC
)
.
Diagnosis.
Externally, the new species differs from other members of the
matrona
species group by the golden glossy, grey-brown, apically ornated forewing (
P. nigrimaculella
Puplesis & Robinson
and
P. alleni
Puplesis & Robinson
possess a snow-white forewing with very few markings apically). In the male genitalia,
P. matrona
sp. nov.
differs from
P. nigrimaculella
by the basally very wide and strongly chitinized juxta, and from
P. alleni
by the large, triangular lobes of uncus, distally pointed gnathos, and very long juxta (
Fig. 2
).
Male
(
Figs. 4–16
). Forewing length 3.8–4.1 mm; wingspan 8.5–8.8 mm (n = 3). Head: palpus cream, short; frontal tuft large, comprised of piliform, snow-white scales (
Figs. 4, 5
); collar very large, distally slightly bilobed (
Figs. 4, 6
), comprised of lamellar, grey-brown scales with strong golden gloss; scape very large, snow-white, distally with some bronze scales; antenna golden glossy, pale grey-brown, exceeding 2/3 of the forewing. Thorax and tegula grey-brown with strong golden gloss and little purple iridescence. Forewing (
Fig. 7
) grey-brown with golden gloss and little purple iridescence in basal half and with white and dark grey-brown markings in apical half (
Fig. 13
). Apex of forewing curved up, with a large, black apical dot, three brown-black costal strigulae and one brown-black tornal strigula, and a distinctive tuft of dark piliform scales; fringe grey-brown; forewing underside dark grey-brown, without spots or androconia. Hindwing and fringe dark grey-brown with golden gloss and little purple iridescence on upper side and underside. Legs grey-brown with golden gloss and some cream scales, especially abundant on hindleg underside. Abdomen brown with strong golden gloss and little purple iridescence on upper side, pale brown with golden gloss and many white-tipped scales on underside; genital plates golden cream, contrasting with colour of the abdomen (
Figs. 15, 16
); anal tufts yellowish cream, short (
Fig. 14
).
Male genitalia
(
Figs. 17–30
). Capsule
735–770 µm
long,
565–590 µm
wide. Uncus with two very large lateral lobes and wide median excavation (
Figs. 17
,
26
). Gnathos inverted V-shaped, with a large central element (
Figs. 2
,
19
,
26
). Valva
580–610 µm
long, with a large,
320–390 µm
long cucullar lobe (
Fig. 28
) and about
110 µm
long median process (
Figs. 27, 29
); transtilla absent. Juxta strongly chitinized, wide, triangular proximally, slender, little chitinized distally (
Figs. 2
,
24, 25
). Vinculum widely rounded, without lateral lobes.
Female.
Unknown.
Bionomics.
Based upon specimens available, adults fly in late April. The
type
specimens were netted during the day by sweeping the vegetation in a moist meadow with low bushes – in an otherwise agricultural area. Otherwise, biology is unknown.
Distribution.
This species is known from a single locality in southern
Turkey
, eastern Mediterranean, at an elevation of about
200 m
.
Etymology.
The species name is a noun, derived from the Latin
matrona
(a matron), with reference to the exceptionality of the new species, possessing the most distinctive external as well as internal (genital) characters within the species group. In ancient Rome,
matron
was applied to a women high status, typically the respected mother of the family or household.