identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
3A0C87F6DD19A71C51D9FF23FCE3F80B.text	3A0C87F6DD19A71C51D9FF23FCE3F80B.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Vangatinea Heppner & Bae 2023	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> VANGATINEA Heppner &amp; Bae ,  gen. nov.</p>
            <p>(Figs. 1–2)</p>
            <p>urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act: 7F849327-272A-4D3B-AC32-5D4ED7D5CA33</p>
            <p> Type species:  Vangatinea sontraensis Heppner &amp; Bae ,  sp. nov.</p>
            <p>Diagnosis. The genus is distinguished by the apically acute wings, with the hindwing costal margin abruptly arcuate at midwing (Fig. 1), and the colorful orange (to golden-orange) forewing maculation, with dark blue-black to purple-brown basal and distal patches, pale brown hindwings, golden-yellow head, and slightly thickened filiform antennae. The male genitalia are strongly sclerotized in compact and rounded tegumen-vinculum conical shell, with very short saccus (or undeveloped), with complicated and small mandible-like valvae; aedeagus with single tubular cornutus as long as aedeagus; male abdomen with small lateral pregenital coremata of spiculate setae (or lacking). The female genitalia have an extremely long and thin ovipositor with simple papillae anales (small and setose), and a strongly sclerotized acute bifurcate sterigma that seems to be a piercing structure; corethrogyne absent; bursa small and ovate; and signum absent.</p>
            <p>Description. Wing expanse: 10.7–16mm (n = 5). Head (Fig. 2): vertex medially conical, with short epicranial suture; transverse suture indistinct; long golden-yellow to orange piliform scales on vertex and frons; eyes medium to large (smaller in female), with simple facets; ocellus absent; chaetosema absent; maxillary palpus short, 5-segmented (total length subequal to basal segment of labial palpus); labial palpus drooping (more upturned in female), segments slender and distal two segments nearly subequal in length, basal segment shorter, with only 2–3 ventral or lateral bristles on middle segment; vom Rath's organ on apical segment; haustellum short (galeae free, length subequal to apical labial palpus segment), held straight ventrally (with minute lateral filaments); mandible minute stub; pilifer minute (with single long seta); antenna filiform, average length (ca. 2/3 forewing length), with single row of scales per barrel-shaped segment; scape of median length (ca. 3–4 antennal segments in length), with indistinct narrow pecten field of 20–22 minute stubby bristles (6–8 of which are stouter); pedicel barrel-shaped (ca. 1.5x in width and length of remaining antennal segments). Thorax: average for body size, smooth-scaled; tegula average; patagia undeveloped; legs average length for body. Forewing (Fig. 1): very narrow elongated (4x longer than wide), having acute apex (female forewing slightly less narrow, see Fig. 5); Sc very close to costal wing margin, to midwing; radius basally vestigial; R1 long, from basal 1/3 of wing; R2–5 evenly spaced from discal cell, with R2 somewhat more distant from R3, and with R5 to before apex; discal cell long, with chorda present but indistinct; median veins evenly spaced, but M3 slightly more approximate to M2 at cell than M1 to M2; cubitus basally vestigial; CuA1 and CuA2 short and parallel to tornus; CuP short at tornus, but stronger from base to near tornus; A1+2 strong, with convex bulge of A1 after basal segment; A2 weak in basal fork; A3 indistinct; tornus straight (slightly rounded after termen); dorsal margin convex; anal margin short-rounded; maculation bright orange with golden iridescence, and black-brown wing base and distal patches; fringes long on termen; retinaculum normal (elongated triangle with rolled apex). Hindwing (Fig. 1): narrow (4x longer than wide), with acute attenuated apex and costal margin concave from midwing to apex (female hindwing slightly less narrow, see Fig. 5); Sc strong, to post-midwing arcuate costal margin; Rs weak until before intersection with transverse vein, then stronger to before apex; M1 to just dorsad of apex; M2 divergent of M1 at termen; M3 and CuA1 nearly parallel; CuA1 and CuA2 short, parallel to tornus; CuP strong to wing base; A1+2 short, to basal dorsal margin, medially concave, with indistinct or vestigial basal fork;A3 short; tornus convex and evenly merging to termen; dorsal margin relatively straight; anal margin turned abruptly from dorsal margin before wing base; maculation pale to brown, with long fringes on termen to anal margin; frenulum of average length for wing size. Abdomen: average size for body; normal scaling; with or without small lateral pregenital coremata in males; female corethrogyne absent. Male genitalia (Fig. 9): complicated structure, with compact tegumen-vinculum conical cylinder strongly sclerotized; uncus projected as bifurcate arms, or reduced; gnathos absent; tuba analis short or undeveloped; subscaphium absent; saccus very small or absent (or with internal spur); valva short, quadratic, and strongly sclerotized (sclerotized more along the saccular margin); valval shape mandible-like with saccular tooth-like spines, or with setose field and more dense setae on saccular margin, and with or without basal appendage; juxta-anellus a short tubular structure, with or without basally lateral pad-like termini; aedeagus long and slender; cornutus a single very long tubule (subequal to length of aedeagus and nearly as wide as aedeagus); phallobase undeveloped; seminal vesica short. Female genitalia (Fig. 11): ovipositor extremely long and thin (ca. 3x segment VI, and longer when ovipositor is fully extended); papillae anales small, slightly setose (not formed strongly for piercing); apophyses anteriores twice thickness of long apophyses posteriores (and 2.3x length of apophyses posteriores); ostium simple, membranous; sterigma divided into proximate and extremely acute asymmetrical caudal knife-like projections, with ventro-lateral carinate edges; ductus bursae a membranous long tube (ca. 1.5x bursa length); corpus bursae small and ovate (ca. 1/2x length of segment VI); signum absent.</p>
            <p>Etymology. This genus is named for the colorful golden-orange adult moths, thus "vang" in Vietnamese ("golden" in English); the moths having orange forewings with golden iridescence, and golden-yellow to orange head scaling. Biology. Unknown. Adults are likely day-fliers, although all specimens were collected at lights.</p>
            <p>Distribution. Only known from mainland Southeast Asia (Cambodia, Thailand, and Vietnam) (Fig. 12 map).</p>
            <p> Discussion. Pending further studies, based on the character spectrum of  Vangatinea we tentatively assign this new genus to the subfamily  Erechthiinae , with possible relationship to  Erechthias Meyrick 1880 and  Pyloetis Stainton 1859 , but lacking some relational characters like the female signum of the latter two genera (Common 1990, Davis and Robinson 1998, Miyamoto et al. 2007, Moriuti and Kadohara 1994, Robinson 2009, Robinson and Nielsen 1993, Robinson et al. 1994, Zimmerman 1978). </p>
            <p> Typical erechthiine genera have an elongated antennal scape, acute narrow wings, lateral male coremata on sternum VI, and females lacking a corethrogyne, as does  Vangatinea . The most comprehensive and detailed modern review of tineid genera thus far is by Robinson and Nielsen (1993; slightly updated for subfamilies in Davis and Robinson 1998), but this is already from 30 years ago and encompasses only the limited Australian fauna (only 44 genera present out of a world fauna of 320 genera); so, in this work  Vangatinea keys out best to  Erechthiinae . The more recent paper by Regier et al. (2014) likewise has no solution for these various unassociated genera. </p>
            <p> The short maxillary palpi, the minute pilifers with single setae, the radically complex yet compact male genitalia, and the elongated acute forewings, as well as the costal arcuation of the hindwings, would also indicate a possible placement in  Meessiinae (Davis and Robinson 1998; Robinson and Nielsen 1993; Zagulajev 1977, 1979). However, meessiine tineids are mostly dull marked to white in forewing maculation. One African meessiine genus (  Merunympha Gozmány 1969 ) has genitalia like  Vangatinea , with a female ovipositor that also is very long and with a strongly sclerotized and caudally acute sternum VII sterigmal plate (Gozmány and Varí 1973, Janse 1968). The tineid generic keys of Zagulajev (1981) for Russia key out to  Meessiinae , but again it covers only a limited fauna in European Russia of only 38 genera, and no tropical genera but only temperate Palearctic genera (see also Petersen 1957 -58). Regier et al. (2014) provisionally elevated the subfamily  Meessiinae to family status, as  Meessiidae , but they suggest further studies are needed and this 'family' status is not followed herein. </p>
            <p> There is superficial resemblance in wing form to the Southeast Asian genus  Tineovertex Moriuti (1982) (Myrmecozelinae) , but basic characters differ greatly (maxillary palpi long and male genitalia more typically of tineid form in  Tineovertex , with vinculum having a long saccus) (Huang et al. 2011); however, both genera have a greatly elongated female ovipositor with setose papillae anales. </p>
            <p> There is some similarity to the Perissomasticinae as well, for their lustrous forewings, the ubiquitous yellow head vertex of erect piliform setae, the compact and strongly sclerotized male genitalia with bifurcate uncus, and the small lateral coremata with spiculate scales in the male abdomen segment VI (Gozmány and Vári 1973, Yang et al. 2014), characters especially evident in some African genera like  Sphallesthasis Gozmány 1959 , but the subfamily characteristic corethrogyne of the females and the typical stubby labial palpus are lacking in  Vangatinea (labial palpus slender and long in  Vangatinea ). </p>
            <p> Wing venation and female genitalia have resemblance also to the Philippine, Sulawesi and Solomons tineid genus  Ischnuridia Sauber 1902 , except the ovipositor has a spear-like cutting papillae anales (setose in  Vangatinea ) and an otherwise typical very long male saccus as in most tineids (versus the short or obsolete saccus in  Vangatinea ) (Davis and Heppner 1987, Diakonoff 1968). While female  Vangatinea have what appears to be a non-piercing ovipositor, in its place the sterigma is extremely sharp (Fig. 11a) (paired knife-like projections but asymmetrical in size), and likely serves as the piercing structure for egg deposition.  Ischnuridia females may pierce into a soft hostplant like banana (  Musa sp. ) since an unnamed  Ischnuridia from the Solomon Islands was captured on a banana plant (Davis and Heppner 1987).  Vangatinea likewise has a long ovipositor and what appears to be a piercing structure on the sterigma, so possibly also for oviposition into a relatively soft hostplant.  Ischnuridia is one of many tineid genera unplaced to subfamily. </p>
            <p> The characters for the new genus description may need revision, since only a single female from the three species is available for the female characters, and likewise the male characters are from only two of the species: however, the overlap of characters of several subfamilies, as noted above, makes subfamily placement in  Erechthiinae still tentative.  Tineidae as a whole still require considerable further study on a world basis, and as noted above, such odd new discoveries as  Vangatinea do not always fit neatly into existing subfamilies, such that current subfamilies may need revision.As also noted by Robinson (2009), out of 340 named tineid genera worldwide over 200 genera remain of uncertain subfamily placement, especially so for tropical genera. Thus, the family requires a thorough revision of the subfamilies to account for all the unassociated genera, but such a task will take decades yet given the few taxonomists who could even venture to tackle such a quest. </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/3A0C87F6DD19A71C51D9FF23FCE3F80B	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Heppner, John B.;Bae, Yang-Seop	Heppner, John B., Bae, Yang-Seop (2023): New species of colorful tineids from Cambodia, Thailand, and Vietnam in the new genus Vangatinea (Lepidoptera: Tineidae: Erechthiinae). Zootaxa 5264 (3): 369-380, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5264.3.5, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5264.3.5
3A0C87F6DD1CA71B51D9FF22FD86FAF3.text	3A0C87F6DD1CA71B51D9FF22FD86FAF3.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Vangatinea sontraensis Heppner & Bae 2023	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Vangatinea sontraensis Heppner &amp; Bae ,  sp. nov.</p>
            <p>(Figs. 1-3, 6, 9, 12)</p>
            <p>urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act: 9049044D-891E-43A5-9162-133718592689</p>
            <p>  Type locality: Vietnam (  Son Tra Forest Reserve , Danang Prov.)  . </p>
            <p> Type materials.   Holotype: ♁,  Son Tra Forest Reserve (400–500m), Danang (Son Tra Peninsula), Danang Prov., Vietnam, 20–22 Apr 2012, J. B. Heppner (gen. slide JBH–2997; adult photo 11237) (MGCL) (deposited at MGCL)  .  Paratypes: 2♁, same site data as holotype (head and wing slide JBH–4257) (MGCL) . </p>
            <p>Diagnosis. This species is distinctive in having the distal half of the forewing mostly golden-orange (mostly purple-brown with orange patches in the other two species), and the male genitalia with valvae of mandible-like shape with tooth-like saccular edge (similar to typical lepidopteran larval mandibles), and uncus developed as bifurcate dorsal projections.</p>
            <p>Description. Wing expanse: 10.7–11.4 mm male (n = 3). Male (Fig. 3). Head (Fig. 6): vertex orange-yellow; frons yellow-white; caudal eye margin yellow; labial palpus light yellow to white, with bristles light brown; antenna dark gray, with basal 1/5 yellow; scape light yellow. Thorax: bronze-golden (lighter medially near patagia); venter dark golden; legs yellow-white to white, with dark brown intersegmental rings. Forewing (Fig. 3): basal half dark bronzegolden, with small round spot of equal color on costa just beyond 1/2, and larger semi-triangular mark on costa at 3/4, distal thin line near apex, and thicker long tornal marginal line; remainder of forewing golden-yellow to light orange; fringe golden-yellow around apex, then brown along termen and tornus; venter dark brown, with tan emargination on costa to tornus; light tan-white on cubital section. Hindwing: pale white, with distal dull brown from 1/2 along costa and along termen to tornus; fringe pale brown to whitish distally, with mostly white along anal margin; venter dark brown, with thin tan emargination from apex to tornus. Abdomen: dark bronze-golden (lighter on T1–2); venter golden-white; genital tufts golden; small lateral pregenital coremata on S6 (Fig. 9b); S6 and T6 caudally concave. Male genitalia (Fig. 9): compact and strongly sclerotized tegumen-vinculum cylinder; uncus projected dorsally as bifurcate finger-like appendages, distally slightly recurved; valva quadratic and mandible-like, with tooth-like saccular margin (somewhat asymmetrical, with saccular margin of left valva convex and of right valva distally projected) (Note: Fig. 9 shows the valvae in ventral view), and termen rounded from strongly sclerotized dorsal margin; apparent saccus very short and turned inwards; juxta-anellus fused as short tubular complex; saccus indistinct inward spur; aedeagus narrow and long; cornutus a long tubule (subequal to aedeagus length). Female: unknown.</p>
            <p>Etymology. The species is named after the Son Tra Forest Reserve, Danang, Vietnam (see Fig. 13).</p>
            <p>Biology. Unknown.</p>
            <p>Distribution. Known only from central coastal Vietnam (Danang) (Fig. 12 map).</p>
            <p>Discussion. The new species was discovered on the Son Tra Peninsula, next to northeast Danang, which is a small isolated forested mountain (to 500m) and peninsula, now protected as the Son Tra Forest Reserve (Fig. 13). This site has a remnant coastal forest of diverse small trees and shrubs where the moths of this new species were found at lights, but likely are day-fliers.</p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/3A0C87F6DD1CA71B51D9FF22FD86FAF3	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Heppner, John B.;Bae, Yang-Seop	Heppner, John B., Bae, Yang-Seop (2023): New species of colorful tineids from Cambodia, Thailand, and Vietnam in the new genus Vangatinea (Lepidoptera: Tineidae: Erechthiinae). Zootaxa 5264 (3): 369-380, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5264.3.5, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5264.3.5
3A0C87F6DD1EA71851D9FA1DFBD7FC8B.text	3A0C87F6DD1EA71851D9FA1DFBD7FC8B.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Vangatinea panghapha Heppner & Bae 2023	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Vangatinea panghapha Heppner &amp; Bae ,  sp. nov.</p>
            <p>(Figs. 4, 7, 10, 12)</p>
            <p>urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act: 14B2A551-BD04-417A-93A5-3340CF1A9CBF</p>
            <p>  Type locality: Thailand (  Pangha Pha Pass , Mai Hong Son Prov.)  . </p>
            <p> Type materials.   Holotype: ♁,  Pangha Pha Pass (868m) [near Soppong], Mai Hong Son Prov., Thailand, 27 Jul 2009, J. B. Heppner (gen. slide JBH–3197; adult photo 12222) (MGCL) (deposited at MGCL). </p>
            <p> Diagnosis. This species is distinctive in the forewing having a basal orange mark besides the midwing orange fascia, the latter also without an extension to the apex (with apical finger-like extension in  V. cambodiensis sp. nov. ). Male genitalia with basal appendage on valvae. </p>
            <p>Description. Wing expanse: 13.5 mm male (n = 1). Male (Fig. 4). Head (Fig. 7): vertex orange; frons yellow and laterally; caudal eye margin yellow; labial palpus yellow-white, with distal segment lighter and dark brown on basal segment, and bristles dark brown; antenna purple-brown, with light yellow segments on basal 5 segments and at 4/ 5 in short section; scape yellow. Thorax: golden-yellow to orange; tegula purple-brown to golden distally; venter purple-brown; forelegs purple-brown except yellow coxae, with remainder of legs golden except purplebrown markings at joints and dorsally on tarsi. Forewing (Fig. 4): lustrous dark brown, with dark orange fascia from costa at 2/5 and recurved to wing base, and wide orange fascia at midwing and with concave emargination by tornus; fringe purple-brown and long from before apex to tornus; venter lustrous dark brown, with light yellow patch on tornus. Hindwing (Fig. 4): pale bronze-brown, with purple-brown near apex; fringe purple-brown from before apex to tornus; venter lustrous dark brown. Abdomen: dark brown, with metallic bronze iridescence, with paler caudal marginal scales per tergite; venter light brown with bronze iridescence, with segmental caudal margins creamwhite; genital tufts brown with bronze iridescence; S6 caudally convex, medially conical. Male genitalia (Fig. 10): tegumen-vinculum as fused cylinder, with strong dorsal transtilla-like semi-circular ring; uncus undeveloped and membranous; medial linear subscaphium on diaphragma; valva quadratic and setose, with saccular margin strongly developed and densely setose and basally abruptly convex before basal joint; valval base with small triangular apically acute setose appendage; juxta-anellus complex as dorsal convex collar with lateral extended flattened arms to lateral semi-circular flattened ends; short oblong basal stylus plate; saccus short; aedeagus narrow and long, cornutus a single long thin tubule (subequal to aedeagus length and width). Female: unknown.</p>
            <p>Etymology. The species is named for the type locality, Pangha Pha Pass, northwestern Thailand (northwest of Chiang Mai).</p>
            <p>Biology. Unknown.</p>
            <p>Distribution. Known only from far northwestern Thailand (Mai Hong Son) (Fig. 12 map).</p>
            <p> Discussion. The new species is closest to  V. cambodiensis sp. nov. , known only from the female, and could possibly be the male of the same species, but it seems to be a separate species. </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/3A0C87F6DD1EA71851D9FA1DFBD7FC8B	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Heppner, John B.;Bae, Yang-Seop	Heppner, John B., Bae, Yang-Seop (2023): New species of colorful tineids from Cambodia, Thailand, and Vietnam in the new genus Vangatinea (Lepidoptera: Tineidae: Erechthiinae). Zootaxa 5264 (3): 369-380, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5264.3.5, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5264.3.5
3A0C87F6DD1FA71551D9F94FFAC8FF4B.text	3A0C87F6DD1FA71551D9F94FFAC8FF4B.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Vangatinea cambodiensis Heppner & Bae 2023	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Vangatinea cambodiensis Heppner &amp; Bae ,  sp. nov.</p>
            <p>(Figs. 5, 8, 11–12)</p>
            <p>urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act: BA14F05C-2FCF-4D69-A52B-A315A2BF0504</p>
            <p>  Type locality: Cambodia (  Cardamon Mts. , Pursat Prov.)  . </p>
            <p> Type materials.   Holotype: ♀,  Cardamon Mts. , [nr. Pramaoy], Pursat Prov., 22 Feb 2012, Y.-S. Bae, X.- V. Le, and B.-S. Park (gen. slide JBH–2998; adult photo 11370) (INUC) (deposited at INUC). </p>
            <p>Diagnosis. This species is distinctive for its large orange midwing fascia with its median distal finger-like orange extension to the wing apex. Female genitalia with acute knife-like asymmetrically bifurcate sterigma.</p>
            <p>Description. Wing expanse: 16 mm female (n = 1). Female (Fig. 5). Head (Fig. 8): vertex and frons orange, with yellow on lower frons; white eye marginal scales (frontal and caudally); labial palpus pale yellow to white distally, with dark brown on basal segment and laterally on middle segment; bristles from base to middle segment pale white; antenna purple-brown, with basal 3 segments pale yellow dorsally; scape light yellow. Thorax: orange; tegula purplebrown proximally, then mostly orange to distal end; venter purple-brown; forelegs purple-brown except yellow coxae; mid- and hind legs yellow except purple-brown femurs, distally on tibiae (and purple-brown spurs), and on tarsae. Forewing (Fig. 5): lustrous purple-brown, with median wide orange fascia across wing from middle to 2/3, basally concave, and with a narrower and distally acute extension from middle of median fascia to wing apex; a thin orange line along anal margin; fringe purple-brown; venter lustrous dark brown, with thin yellow costal line at 2/3. Hindwing (Fig. 5): purple brown, lighter towards base; fringe purple-brown; venter lustrous purple-brown. Abdomen: dark brown to purple-brown, except dark golden on T1; venter yellow-orange; genital tufts purple-brown, but ventrally yellow-orange; pregenital plate (S6) simple, unadorned; S7 fused with sterigmal projections. Female genitalia (Fig. 11): ovipositor very long (ca. 2.5x length of abdomen S6) and narrow; papilla analis small, slightly acute (but not scerlotized as piercing type); apophyses long and slender, with posterior pair somewhat longer than anterior pair; ostium a simple, membranous funnel tube to ductus bursae; sterigma with asymmetrical strongly sclerotized knifelike caudal spines (left spine shorter than right spine, Fig. 11a) and fused to S7; ductus bursae short (ca. 1.5x bursal length) and narrow, membranous; corpus bursa ovate; signum absent. Male: unknown.</p>
            <p>Etymology. The species is named after Cambodia.</p>
            <p>Biology. Unknown.</p>
            <p>Distribution. Known only from southwestern Cambodia (Pursat), in the Cardamon Mts (Fig. 12 map).</p>
            <p> Discussion. The female of this new species appears somewhat similar to the male of  V. panghapha sp. nov. , so it is not known if it could be the female of the same species, but it appears to be a distinct third species. </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/3A0C87F6DD1FA71551D9F94FFAC8FF4B	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Heppner, John B.;Bae, Yang-Seop	Heppner, John B., Bae, Yang-Seop (2023): New species of colorful tineids from Cambodia, Thailand, and Vietnam in the new genus Vangatinea (Lepidoptera: Tineidae: Erechthiinae). Zootaxa 5264 (3): 369-380, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5264.3.5, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5264.3.5
