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Erechthias

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Erechthias is a genus of the fungus moth family, Tineidae. Therein, it belongs to the subfamily Erechthiinae, of which it is the type genus. The exact circumscription of this genus is still disputed, but it may encompass more than 150 species.

Systematics and taxonomy

Here, the genus is treated in the wide circumscription (sensu lato) adopted by many authors today, and representing the presumed core group of the Erechthiinae. Delimited thus, Erechthias includes several other genera, some of which have occasionally been treated as independent even by fairly recent authors. They are still rather similar and contain moths that are (at least overwhelmingly) very closely related. Still, they differ in details such as the wing venation – with Erechthias sensu stricto having all veins separate (as opposed to e.g. the Decadarchis group, which has hindwing veins 5 and 6 stalked) – or the clasper's harpe being nude in Erechthias s.str. but bearing a cluster of setae on the costa. However, the female genitals look almost alike in all of them.[1]

Many of these supposedly distinct genera were always considered monotypic and are unlikely to be valid. More notable are Decadarchis (including Caryolestis, Nesoxena, Pantheus and perhaps others) and Ereunetis (including Lepidobregma and Neodecadarchis); these two are more frequently considered separate genera than other subgroups of Erechthias. The members of the former (sub)genus were in fact at first often placed in Tinea of subfamily Tineinae. Other species of Erechthias were historically assigned to Acridotarsa – also of the Tineinae (E. deloneura) – or to Mesopherna of the Myrmecozelinae (E. epomadia). E. glyphidaula has been a particular source of confusion; even veteran researcher Edward Meyrick, in some of his last works, no less than three times established a new monotypic genus for this species.[2]

More unusually, some species of Erechthias were initially mistaken as members of the cosmet moth genus Cosmopteryx (E. cyanosticta) and the ermine moth genus Argyresthia (E. zebrina); these genera are basal Ditrysia not particularly closely related to Erechthias. The enigmatic "genus" Acrocenotesa single species initially held to belong in the Plutellidae, which are also not close relatives of Erechthias – is also included here in the present treatment.[3]

As another taxonomic curiosity of this genus, E. beeblebroxi is named after Douglas Adams's famous two-headed science fiction character Zaphod Beeblebrox;[4] the moth has a "false head" pattern that presumably helps to confuse would-be predators.

Finally, the actual delimitation of Erechthias against related genera such as Comodica still needs to be determined. For example, whether the Erechthiinae Callicerastis stagmatias and Mecomodica fullawayi are justifiably separated in their monotypic genera or better included in Erechthias (as are all the other species once placed in Callicerastis) is disputed; the latter in particular seems to be somewhat intermediate between Comodica and Erechthias.[5]

Selected species

The numerous species of Erechthias include:[6]

Synonyms

Times and again, groups of these moths have been proposed for separation in distinct genera. These junior synonyms of Erechthias, in the circumscription used here, are:[7]

  • Acrocenotes A.N.Diakonoff, 1968
  • Aeolarchis Meyrick, 1935
  • Amphisyncentris Meyrick, 1933
  • Anemerarcha Meyrick, 1937
  • Caryolestis Meyrick, 1934
  • Decadarchis Meyrick, 1886
  • Empaesta Bradley, 1956
  • Ereunetis Meyrick, 1880
  • Gongylodes A.J.Turner, 1933
  • Hectacma Meyrick, 1915
  • Lepidobregma Zimmerman, 1978
  • Neodecadarchis Zimmerman, 1978
  • Nesoxena Meyrick, 1929
  • Pantheus Zimmerman, 1978
  • Tinexotaxa Gozmany, 1968
  • Triadogona Meyrick, 1937
  • Zanclopseustis Meyrick, 1921

Footnotes

  1. ^ Clarke (1986)
  2. ^ Clarke (1986), Pitkin & Jenkins (2004), ABRS (2010), Robinson [2011]
  3. ^ ABRS (2010), Robinson [2011]
  4. ^ Muckenfuss, Mark (12 May 2013). "UCR: New wasp carries university's name". The Press-Enterprise. Enterprise Media. Archived from the original on 20 December 2013. Retrieved 20 Dec 2013.
  5. ^ Pitkin & Jenkins (2004), ABRS (2010), Robinson [2011]
  6. ^ Clarke (1986), ABRS (2010), Robinson [2011]
  7. ^ Pitkin & Jenkins (2004), ABRS (2010)

References

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Erechthias: Brief Summary

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Erechthias is a genus of the fungus moth family, Tineidae. Therein, it belongs to the subfamily Erechthiinae, of which it is the type genus. The exact circumscription of this genus is still disputed, but it may encompass more than 150 species.

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Description

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Head (Figs 12–15): Frons with scales moderately broad, either mostly appressed or partially raised, sometimes with weak scale tufts arising from ventro-lateral margin; pilifers present, with numerous, short bristles; vertex with prominent occipital and lateral tufts and scales more slender; Eye of medium size; frons broad; interocular index (Davis 1975) 0.7–1.2. Antenna extending ~ 0.7–1.0× length of forewing; scape with prominent pectin of ~10–14 bristles (Fig. 13); intercalary sclerite well sclerotized; flagellomeres with a single annulus of appressed, narrow scales; antennal cilia short in both sexes. Maxillary palpus as long as or usually slightly longer than labial palpus, 5-segmented, with length ratio of segments from base: 1.0: 0.5: 1.7–2.75: 5.5–8.7: 2-3.6. Haustellum moderately developed, ~ 0.6–1.0× length of labial palpus. Labial palpus well developed, length ratios from base: 1.0: 1.3–2.5: 1.0–1.4; segment 2 sometimes broad at base, with a prominent ventral brush of elongate, slender scales; a series of 5-16 long whitish to black bristles arising mostly laterally; 1-3 long, lateral bristles also usually present on basal segment. Thorax: Wings (Figs 16–18) relatively narrow; forewing L/W index: 0.23–0.27; hindwing L/W index: 0.24–0.32. Forewing with Sc and R present in all species, Rs usually with 3–4 branches, reduced to one branch in Erechthias grayi; Rs4 and M1 rarely stalked; accessory cell usually absent, sometimes with a trace of chorda; M with 2 branches (M1 and M2+3), with M fused with Cu in Erechthias grayi; base of M usually absent or vestigial in cell; Cu with 2 branches (fused with M in Erechthias grayi); CuP usually weak; A3 vestigial; retinaculum in male on underside of subcoasta; triangular, with a rolled apex. Hindwing with Sc and R fused; Rs usually present but incomplete, unbranched; M usually 3-branched, sometimes with M1and 2 fused; Cu 2-branced; A3 usually present; frenulum with single large spine in male, 1-3 spines in female. Legs unmodified; foretibia with epiphysis arising near distal third of tibia; midtibia with a single pair of spurs of unequal length arising near apex; hindtibia with 2 pairs of spurs of unequal lengths arising near basal third of tibia and near apex. Abdomen: Apodemes slender, slightly convergent, or short, basally broad and nearly triangular. Segment A8 with male coremata present or absent; female corethrogyne absent. Male genitalia: Segment A10 mostly membranous, often setose and melanized laterally; apex of uncus variably bilobed. Tegumen a narrow dorsal ring, poorly differentiated from vinculum; vinculum with a well developed, usually broadly rounded, triangular saccus. Valva usually simple, rarely with lobes or processes, usually broad, and often with a dense concentration of thick, costal spines; costal apodemes usually well developed. Gnathos absent. Juxta highly modified, forming sclerotized pouch of variable depth between bases of valvae and articulating with costal apodemes of valvae. Aedeagus typically in the form of a simple cylinder, with a slightly swollen base in some species; vesica sometimes lined with minute spicules, or with 1–2 much larger, spine-like cornuti. Female genitalia: Ovipositor short to moderately long, 0.05–0.50× length of abdomen; posterior ventral apophyses not developed; posterior (dorsal) apophyses 1.5–2.7× length of anterior apophyses. Eighth tergite often narrowly rectangular, with a few terminal setae; eighth sternum connected to anterior apophyses by ventral rami. Bursa copulatrix 0.5–1.9× length of abdomen. Antrum relatively slender, often narrowly funnel-shaped or sometimes in the form of an incomplete ring; junction with ductus seminalis immediately anterior to antrum. Ductus bursae slender, with or without coarse microtrichia lining interior. Corpus bursae membranous, ovate to pyriform, often with a single small signum with the more slender, rodlike end projecting free from exterior wall of corpus bursae; signum sometimes can be stellate, blade-shaped, in the shape of a small ridged plate, or absent.
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Donald R. Davis, Howard Mendel
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Davis D, Mendel H (2013) The genus Erechthias Meyrick of Ascension Island, including discovery of a new brachypterous species (Lepidoptera, Tineidae) ZooKeys 341: 1–20
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Donald R. Davis
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