identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
03C5841C4B6F2C3FFF1E5658A0C3F846.text	03C5841C4B6F2C3FFF1E5658A0C3F846.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Agrotis colossa Gyulai & Saldaitis	<div><p>Agrotis colossa Gyulai &amp; Saldaitis, sp. n.</p><p>(Figs 1–11, 17–21, 25, 26)</p><p>(= Agrotis colossa Boursin, 1965, manuscript name)</p><p>Holotype: ♂ ( Fig 1) “ Li –kiang. (China) . Provinz Nord – Yuennan. 14.iii.1935. H. Höne “ (yellow label); “ Holotype ” (red label); “préparation No. Hö. 15 Ch. Boursin ” (white label); “ Agrotis colossa Brsn. sp. n. ♂ Boursin det.” (white label), (coll. ZFMK).</p><p>Paratypes: ♀ “ allotype ” “ Li –kiang. (China). Provinz Nord–Yuennan. 14.iii.1935 . H. Höne “ (yellow label); “ Allotype ” (red label) (coll. ZFMK) (Fig. 3); further paratypes: 1 ♂ and 1 ♀ China, NW Yunnan, Baima Xue Shan, near <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=98.996666&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=28.415" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 98.996666/lat 28.415)">Yak–La</a> pass, N28°24.900′, E98°59.800′, 3900 m, 21.–22.v.2012 leg . Floriani (coll. AFM) ; 1 ♀, same data (coll. PGM); 2 ♂, China, NW Yunnan, Lijiang / Zhongdian, near <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=99.895&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=27.495" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 99.895/lat 27.495)">Tuguancun</a>, N27°29.700′, E99°53.700′, 3900 m, 24–25.v.2012, leg. Floriani (coll. PGM) ; 1 ♂, China, Sichuan, road from Shimian to Mianning, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=29.0633&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=102.32906" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 29.0633/lat 102.32906)">Yuan Gen village</a>, N102°19.744′, E29°03.798′, 3900 m, 28.iii.2011, Floriani &amp; Saldaitis leg. (coll. AFM) ; 27 ♂, 5 ♀, China, West Sichuan, Shaluli Shan, 40 km NW from <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=100.08438&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=29.290016" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 100.08438/lat 29.290016)">Daocheng</a>, 4060 m, N29°17.401′, E100°05.063′, 08.v.2016, Saldaitis leg (DNA voucher code MF 071465) ; 6 ♂, 5 ♀, the same, but 03.v.2016; 11 ♂, 3 ♀, the same, but 12.–13.v.2016 (DNA voucher code MF 071462); 11 ♂, 1 ♀, China, West Sichuan, near <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=100.34293&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=29.818933" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 100.34293/lat 29.818933)">Litang</a>, 4000 m, N29°49.136′, E100°20.576′, 04.v.2016, Saldaitis leg (DNA voucher code MF 071463) ; 9 ♂, the same, but 09.–10.v.2016; 2 ♂, 2 ♀, China, West Sichuan, 25 km N from <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=99.234634&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=30.200817" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 99.234634/lat 30.200817)">Batang</a>, 3100 m, dry valley, N30°12.049′, E099°14.078′, 05.V.2016, Saldaitis leg (DNA voucher code MF 071464) ; 1 ♂, China, W. Sichuan, 50 km. NE from Xiangcheng, 3200 m, 07.v.2016, Saldaitis leg ; 5♂, China, W. Sichuan, road Daocheng / <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=100.330414&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=29.613132" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 100.330414/lat 29.613132)">Litang</a>, 4100 m, N29°36.788’, E100°19.825’, 11.v.2016, Saldaitis leg., Slide Nos PGY 2954 ♂ (DNA voucher code MF 071458) , PGY3118♂ (DNA voucher code MF 071460), PGY4515♂, PGY4523♂, PGY4581♂, PGY4582♂ (DNA voucher code MF 071461), PGY4560♀ (DNA voucher code MF 071459), PGY4580♀ (colls. AFM, ASV, M. Dvořák, F. Hofer, PGM, H. Seibald, W. Speidel &amp; J. Stumpf).</p><p>Diagnosis. Agrotis colossa sp. n. differs from the majority of its Asiatic congeners by the relatively large size (wingspan 38–46 mm, forewing length 19–22 mm, however a local population restricted to the high mountains of western Sichuan only 33–41 mm, length of forewing 15–19 mm), characteristic forewing pattern and the broadly bipectinate antennae of the males. In Asia, the only really resembling taxa among the additional member of the genus Agrotis is the Agrotis nagyapo Hreblay &amp; Ronkay, 1998 (Fig. 12), those of the size (38–48 mm wingspan and 19–23 mm forewing length) is generally matching with the A. colossa . Agrotis colossa (Figs 1–11) is distinguishable from it by the generally lighter, sometimes whitish thoracic pubescence of both tegulae, the more conspicuously defined stigmata, particularly the larger claviform spot, the more outward projecting postmedial line in the medium section and the more uniform and darker hindwing, with more prominent cellular spot, whereas the latter one is missing or obsolescent in the A. nagyapo . Although the original types of the A. colossa are old and the colouration might be changed somewhat during the past decades, it is well visible, that the new species have rather variable slate grey suffused ground colour in the forewing (there are few darker, greyish or brown coloured specimens among the fresh ones), whereas this is brownish–greyish and pale ochre suffused in the A. nagyapo (Fig. 12). The stigmata are incompletely black outlined in A. colossa, orbicular spot somewhat elongated without or only with slight dark infiltration and always without ochre suffusion; while completely black outlined and pale ochre suffused in A. nagyapo . The separation needs careful study by the comparison of the male genitalia, since slight differences are recognizable as it is usual in the genera Agrotis, however distinction is much easier in case of the females. Agrotis colossa (Figs 17–21) have somewhat stronger valva and higher juxta with slighter medial incision and finer carinal plate with slighter, longer, finely dentate basal bar in the vesica and longer vesica tube. The female genitalia of the “ allotype ” not respectable, since the abdomen has been glued and no Agrotis genitalia was found inside after dissection (very likely of Xestia Hübner or Sineugraphe Boursin sp., Fig. 29) The genitalia of a female specimen (Fig. 25), collected not very far from the “ allotype ” shows remarkable differences from that of the A.</p><p>nagyapo (Fig. 28) by the significantly longer papillae anales, apophyses anteriores and posteriores (particularly the former ones), conspicuously longer appendix bursae and shorter, more ample corpus bursae.</p><p>It is worth to mention, that A. colossa considerably different externally from the Nepalian (Langtang) Agrotis maculaclarus Plante, 1979, of which have also bipectinated antennae in the males and filiform in the females.</p><p>Nevertheless, separation is easy, since A. colossa strikingly differs from the A. maculaclarus externally by its more elongated forewing apex, unicolorous, evenly slate greyish or light greyish brown coloured forewings, very conspicuous, distinctive forewing pattern, sharply defined, mostly encircled stigmata; while the ground colour of the forewings dark granulose grey in the A. maculaclarus, the marginal area and the stigmata conspicuously lighter, somewhat whitish suffused, stigmata less defined, the antemedial line less wavy and out warding in the lower section and the cellular spot in the hindwing is not present or obsolescent. In the male genitalia, the shape and the width of the valva very different, as in the A. colossa sp. n. these are much thinner, longer, elongated, particularly in the terminal section; the single female A. maculaclarus genitalia has never been dissected.</p><p>Description. Wingspan 38–46 mm, forewing length 19–22 mm, however a local population from Sichuan only 33–41 mm, length of forewing 15–19 mm); the known females, particularly the “ allotype ” are distinctly smaller. Antennae of the males are light brown, broadly bipectinated, however somewhat more lighter, filiform in the females; the palpi brown, last section and the frons light brown, vertex and vesture of the thorax whitish– greyish brown, however lighter in both sides, whereas pale or whitish on the underside; the collar darker with a medial black line. The ground colour of the forewings unicolorous variable light slate grey or grey somewhat with greyish brown suffusion, however there are a few darker, greyish brown coloured specimens among the fresh ones. The ground plan of the forewing pattern basically resembles those of the close relative species; however, the wing shape and the intense of the pattern variable. The most remarkable external features of the new species are the forewing with pointed apex, the well discernible, more or less evenly black outlined orbicular, reniform and claviform stigmata with the black defined, double, somewhat wavy antemedial line with a projection in the lower section inward the medial area and the simple, crenulated postmedial transverse line. The hind wings lighter, evenly whitish–brown suffused in which entirely lack the medial line, whereas the cellular spot present, tiny, but well discernible. Under side of the wings lighter greyish, the hindwings whitish, with diffuse brown shade of the reniform stigma and the postmedial transverse line in the forewing and with obsolescent brown shade of the medial line and cellular spot in the hindwing. The individual variability in size, intensity of ground colour and wing pattern can be on wide scale.</p><p>Male genitalia (Figs 17–21). It can be characterized by the not evenly broad (medially broader) and straight, apically slightly hooked uncus; long terminally rounded penicular lobes of the tegumen; shield-like, dorsally somewhat double humped juxta with medial incision and a small ventral medial flap–like appendage; V–shaped vinculum; forward projected, terminally inward curved, apically pointed clasper; spatulate valva with terminally elongated section and fine clavus; almost straight, rather short aedeagus, with fine, long carinal plate, extended in a slight, long, finely dentate basal bar in the very long tubular vesica with basal and subbasal swellings and a terminal bulb-like swelling.</p><p>Female genitalia (Figs 25, 26). The main recognizable features (Figs 25, 26) are the rather long apophyses anterioris and posterioris (the latter ones are longer), the small plate-like shape of the antrum, the membranous, proximally evenly tighter ductus bursae, the very long, tubular, posteriorly evenly broaden, terminally rounded appendix bursae and the much shorter, saccate, distally evenly broaden terminally globular-ovoid corpus bursae.</p><p>Biology and distribution. Series of males and females were collected at light on 21.–25.v. 2012 in northwest China's Yunnan province in a remote area, located near Lijiang and Yak La pass of the Baima Xue mountain range, later 03.–13.v. 2016 in remote parts of west China Sichuan province near the Daocheng, Litang, and Batang of the Shaluli Shan mountain range. The new species was collected at altitudes ranging from 3100 to 4100 meters in mountain mixed forests dominated by various conifer trees, bushes and rhododendron.</p><p>DNA Barcoding. Molecular variation based on the Kimura two–parameter distance model (Kimura 1980) for 658 bp COI DNA barcodes in eight A. colossa specimens varied from 0 to 1.6 % and in four A. rachingeri from 0 to 0.2 %. A pairwise comparison between A. colossa and A. rachingeri specimens resulted in a variation from 3.6 % to 4.6 %, i.e. more than two times larger than the largest intraspecific genetic distance detected in A. colossa .</p><p>Specimen ID with DNA voucher code and GenBank accession code of the COI sequences, are listed as follows: A. colossa PT, Sichuan, road from Shimian to Mianning, 28.iii.2011, PGY 2954 ♂ ( Agrotis 1; MF 071458) ; A. colossa PT, Yunnan, Baima Xue Shan near Yak – La pass, 21.–22.v.2012, PGY 4560 ♀ ( Agrotis 2; MF 071459) ; A. colossa PT, NW Yunnan, Lijiang / Zhongdian, near Tuguancun, 24–25.v.2012, PGY 3118 ♂ ( Agrotis 3; MF 071460) ; A. colossa PT, NW Yunnan, Lijiang / Zhongdian, near Tuguancun, 24–25.v.2012, PGY 4582 ♂ ( Agrotis 4; MF 071461) ; A. colossa PT, male, West Sichuan, Shaluli Shan, 40 km NW from Daocheng, 12-13.v.2016, ( Agrotis 5; MF 071462) ; A. colossa PT, male, West Sichuan, near Litang, 04.v.2016, ( Agrotis 6; MF 071463) ; A. colossa PT, female, West Sichuan, 25 km N from Batang, 05.v.2016, ( Agrotis 7; MF 071464) ; A. colossa PT, female, West Sichuan, Shaluli Shan, 40 km NW from Daocheng, 08.v.2016, ( Agrotis 8; MF 071465) ; A. rachingeri PT, 2 males &amp; 2 females, West Sichuan, 25 km N from Batang, 05.v.2016, (males: Agrotis 9; MF 071466, Agrotis 10; MF 071467; females: Agrotis 11; MF 071468, Agrotis 12; MF 071469) .</p><p>Etymology. Authors decided to keep the original name by Charles Boursin, keeping respect his original decision and in honour his outstanding job on the Palaearctic Noctuidae; furthermore the name is very fits with this species.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C5841C4B6F2C3FFF1E5658A0C3F846	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	Gyulai, Peter;Saldaitis, Aidas;Truuverk, Andro	Gyulai, Peter, Saldaitis, Aidas, Truuverk, Andro (2017): Notes on the Agrotis colossa Boursin problem, with the description of new Agrotis species from China (Lepidoptera, Noctuidae). Zootaxa 4291 (1): 144-154, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4291.1.8
03C5841C4B6B2C30FF1E51A3A250FF2A.text	03C5841C4B6B2C30FF1E51A3A250FF2A.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Agrotis rachingeri Gyulai & Saldaitis	<div><p>Agrotis rachingeri Gyulai &amp; Saldaitis, sp. n.</p><p>(Figs 13–16, 22, 23, 27)</p><p>Holotype: ♂ (Fig. 13), China, West Sichuan, 25 km N from <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=99.234634&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=30.200817" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 99.234634/lat 30.200817)">Batang</a>, 3100 m, dry valley, N30°12.049′, E 099°14.078′, 05.v.2016, leg. Saldaitis, slide no . PGY4561♂ (coll. PGM, later to be deposited in the HNHM).</p><p>Paratypes: 45 specimens (Figs 14–16), with the same data as the holotype; slide Nos PGY4521♂, PGY4539♀, DNA voucher codes: MF 071466, MF 071467, MF 071468, MF 071469), (colls AFM, ASV, HNHM, PGY and M. Rachinger).</p><p>Diagnosis. The most resembling and closely associated taxa in the genus Agrotis are A. colossa (Figs 1–11), and A. nagyapo (Fig 12). New species (Figs 13–16) is easily distinguishable from the two congeners both by its size and external features, therefore confusion is impossible with them, although slight differences are recognizable in the male genitalia, as it is usual in the genera Agrotis . Agrotis rachingeri sp. n. (Figs 13–16) is significantly smaller, wingspan 32–36 mm, length of forewing 15–17 mm; versus these are 33–46 mm and 15–22 mm of A. colossa (a few specimens with the same measurements as in A. rachingeri are known from western Sichuan, however have much broader wings), and 38–48 mm and 19–23 mm of A. nagyapo . Beside the remarkably smaller size, A. rachingeri easily separable from the two by the more elongated forewing apex, evenly dark brown coloured, narrower forewings, brown, somewhere conjectural subterminal line, uniformly brown stigmata, without more or less brown or black or ochre infiltration; the missing of the pale ochre shade of the antemedial, postmedial and subterminal transverse lines and stigmata; additionally, in A. rachingeri the cellular spot in the hindwing is always strictly defined, while in the A. nagyapo it is missing or obsolescent. The separation needs careful study by the comparison of the slightly distinctive male genitalia; Agrotis rachingeri (Figs 22, 23) have apparently smaller clasping apparatus, whereas those of the A. colossa (Figs 17–21) and A. nagyapo (Fig. 24) are more robust. New species separable from the two by the finer, evenly thin uncus; the slenderer valva with terminally remarkably elongated section, smaller clavus, shorter carinal plate extending in slighter dentate belt of the vesica; additionally, the tube of the vesica is distinctly shorter. In the female genitalia (Fig 27), the separation is much easier than in case of males. Agrotis rachingeri (Fig. 27) have apparently smaller clasping apparatus from the two; particularly the appendix bursae is significantly shorter, smaller and less broaden distally than in the A. colossa (Figs 25, 26) less saccate than in the A. nagyapo (Fig. 28) and the ovipositor distinctly shorter than in the A. colossa . It is worth to mention, that A. rachingeri considerably different externally from the Nepalian (Langtang) A. maculaclarus, of which have also bipectinated antennae in the males and filiform in the females. Nevertheless, separation is easy, since A. rachingeri strikingly differs from the A. maculaclarus externally by its more elongated forewing apex, unicolorous, evenly brown coloured forewings, and brown stigmata; while the ground colour of the forewings granulose grey in the A. maculaclarus, the marginal area and the stigmata lighter, somewhat whitish suffused, stigmata less defined, incompletely black outlined, the antemedial line less wavy without the inward in the lower section toward the medial area and the cellular spot in the hindwing is missing or obsolescent. In the male genitalia, the shape and the width of the valva very different, as in the A. rachingeri these are much thinner, longer, elongated, particularly in the terminal part of cucullus; whereas those of the female genitalia of the A. maculaclarus have never been dissected.</p><p>Description. Wingspan 32–36 mm, length of forewing 15–17 mm. Antennae of the males are brown, broadly bipectinated, however somewhat lighter, filiform in the females; the palpi light brown; the frons, vertex and vesture of the thorax whitish– greyish brown, whereas whitish on the underside; the collar darker with a medial black line, or basally blackish until the middle. The ground colour of the forewings is unicolorous brown somewhere with darker brown suffusion. The ground plan of the forewing pattern basically resembles those of the two close relative species above. The most remarkable external features of the new species are the forewing with pointed apex, the well discernible, sharply defined and the almost evenly black outlined orbicular, reniform and claviform stigmata, the black defined, double, somewhat wavy antemedial line with a projection in the lower section inward the medial area and the simple, crenellated postmedial transverse line. The hind wings lighter, whitish, evenly brown suffused, slightly darker in the marginal area, entirely lack the medial line, whereas the cellular spot present, tiny, sharply discernible. Under side of the wings lighter brown, the hind wings whitish brown, with conspicuous dark brown medial line and cellular spot.</p><p>Male genitalia (Figs 22, 23). It can be characterized by the evenly thin and straight uncus; shield–like, somewhat rounded juxta, with two or three small dorsal triangle and ventral medial flap-like appendages; V–shaped vinculum; forward projected, terminally inward curved, apically pointed clasper; rather weak, spatulate valva with terminally elongated terminal section and fine clavus; almost straight, rather short aedeagus, and fine, sclerotized carinal plate extending with a thin belt to the basal section of the very long tubular vesica, bearing basal and subbasal swellings and a terminal bulb–like swelling.</p><p>Female genitalia (Fig. 27). The main recognizable features are the rather short ovipositor, long apophysis anteriores and posteriores (the latter ones are much longer), the plate-like shape of the not sclerotized antrum, the short, membranous, posteriorly evenly tighter, longitudinally slightly crispate ductus bursae, the long, tubular, posteriorly evenly broaden and rounded appendix bursae and the much shorter, distally evenly broaden terminally globular-ovoid corpus bursae.</p><p>Biology and distribution. Large numbers of males and females were collected at ultraviolet light during a single warm, very windy night on 05.v. 2016 in remote part of west China Sichuan province near the Batang. Agrotis rachingeri was collected at altitude ranging 3100 meters in mountain river dry valley rarely covered by mixed forests dominated by various deciduous trees and bushes.</p><p>Etymology. The new species is named in the honor of Dr. Markus Rachinger (Vienna, Austria) an entomologist, for his merits in entomology.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C5841C4B6B2C30FF1E51A3A250FF2A	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	Gyulai, Peter;Saldaitis, Aidas;Truuverk, Andro	Gyulai, Peter, Saldaitis, Aidas, Truuverk, Andro (2017): Notes on the Agrotis colossa Boursin problem, with the description of new Agrotis species from China (Lepidoptera, Noctuidae). Zootaxa 4291 (1): 144-154, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4291.1.8
