Sabatinca weheka

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Sabatinca weheka
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Family: Micropterigidae
Genus: Sabatinca
Species:
S. weheka
Binomial name
Sabatinca weheka
Gibbs, 2014[1]

Sabatinca weheka is a species of moth belonging to the family Micropterigidae.[2] This species is endemic to New Zealand where it can be found near Lake Matheson and also on Secretary Island. This species is very similar in appearance to S. heighwayi in both their larval and adult forms but the adults of S. weheka differ as they are darker and more strongly marked on the forewings and have a dark brownish base colour to their wings. This species is on the wing from the middle to the end of October and lives in forest with a high rainfall. The larval host species is the liverwort Plagiochila deltoidea.

This species was first described by George Gibbs in 2014 using specimens collected at Lake Matheson by Gibbs.[2] The male holotype specimen is held in the New Zealand Arthropod Collection.[2]

This species is very similar in appearance to S. heighwayi however its morphology is distinctive and this distinction has been confirmed by gene sequencing.[2]

Description

The larvae of this species is very similar in appearance to the larvae of S. heighwayi which are a pale yellowish-green colour.[2]

Gibbs described the adults of this species as follows:

Large size (fwl ca 6 mm); fw with a number of narrow transverse whitish fasciae, dominated by a broad white fascia at 1/3 with kink toward anal margin, heavily shaded with dark brown scales on proximal side. A pair of unique posterior horns on ventral lobe of valvae.[2]

The adults of this species differ from S. heighwayi as they have darker, more strongly marked appearance to their forewings with a dark brownish base colour.[2]

Distribution

Lake Matheson, type locality for S. weheka.

This species is endemic to New Zealand and is known from Lake Matheson in Westland and also Grono Spur on Secretary Island in Fiordland.[2][1]

Life cycle

Host plants and habitat

References

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