Onycholyda kumamotonis

Onycholyda kumamotonis (Matsumura, 1912) (Figs 35, 36) (https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.11405067) Lyda kumamotonis Matsumura, 1912: 75. Onycholyda kumamotonis: Beneš, 1972b: 387; Shinohara, 1985c: 716; Shinohara, 1987a: 499; Zhelochovtsev & Zinovjev, 1995: 398; Shinohara, 2002b: 422; Shinoha...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Shinohara, Akihiko, Kramp, Katja, Taeger, Andreas
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: 2022
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Online Access:https://zenodo.org/record/6903072
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6903072
Description
Summary:Onycholyda kumamotonis (Matsumura, 1912) (Figs 35, 36) (https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.11405067) Lyda kumamotonis Matsumura, 1912: 75. Onycholyda kumamotonis: Beneš, 1972b: 387; Shinohara, 1985c: 716; Shinohara, 1987a: 499; Zhelochovtsev & Zinovjev, 1995: 398; Shinohara, 2002b: 422; Shinohara, 2004: 262; Shinohara & Lelej, 2007: 929; Taeger et al., 2010: 84; Sundukov & Lelej, 2012: 108; Sundukov, 2015: 249; Sundukov, 2017: 103; Shinohara, 2019: 7; Shinohara, 2020: 12, 236. Onycholyda sp.: Shinohara & Okutani, 1983: 277. Lectotype designation. Shinohara (1985d) treated a specimen in Matsumura’s collection in HU as the holotype, stating “ Matsumura (1912) described this species on the basis of a single female from Kiushu (Kumamoto)”. However, Matsumura (1912) did not give the actual number of the specimens examined and thus the specimen is a syntype. Here we designate this specimen as a lectotype. It is labeled “ Japan, Kumamoto, Matsumura, 7/18” (HU). Material examined. About 355 specimens, including the lectotype. Two specimens are from the Russian Far East (Shinohara 1985d). Distribution. Russia (Sakhalin), Japan (Hokkaido, Kunashiri Is., Honshu,?Kyushu). Host plant. Rosaceae: Filipendula camtschatica (Pall.) Maxim. (Shinohara & Okutani 1983; Shinohara 1985c). Remarks. This species is not rare around Filipendula camtschatica bushes in Hokkaido, where two species of Pamphilius, P. venustus (Smith, 1874) and P. sapporensis (Matsumura, 1912) also occur together. These three pamphiliids are all associated with Filipendula. In the COI analysis (Fig. 139), three specimens from Hokkaido (NSMT30554, 30788, 30789) and four specimens from Honshu (NSMT30730, 30785–30787) each formed a different cluster and the two clusters had a sistergroup relationship supported by 100% UFBoot values. The maximum p -distance in the Hokkaido cluster was 0.2% and that in the Honshu cluster was 1%. The minimum p -distance between the Honshu and Hokkaido clusters was 2.2%. In the NaK tree (Fig. 153), the four Honshu ...