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Biodiversity Data Journal :
Taxonomic Paper
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Corresponding author: Hui-Hong Zhang (leozhanghh@foxmail.com)
Academic editor: Shinichi Nakahara
Received: 02 Jul 2021 | Accepted: 17 Aug 2021 | Published: 24 Aug 2021
© 2021 Qiu-Ju He, Wen Shi, Chen-Yang Li, Chuan-Hui Yi, Zhuo-Heng Jiang, Shao-Ji Hu, Hui-Hong Zhang
This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Citation:
He Q-J, Shi W, Li C-Y, Yi C-H, Jiang Z-H, Hu S-J, Zhang H-H (2021) The first record of the monospecific genus Rhinopalpa (Lepidoptera: Nymphalidae) from China. Biodiversity Data Journal 9: e70975. https://doi.org/10.3897/BDJ.9.e70975
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The family Nymphalidae is the largest group of butterflies with high species richeness. Rhinopalpa polynice (Cramer, [1779]), a forest species, was discovered in the mid-stream of the Yuanjiang-Red River Valley of Yunnan Province for the first time, which represents the first record of the genus Rhinopalpa in China.
The species R. polynice (Cramer, [1779]) is the first record of the genus Rhinopalpa from China. The specimen was collected in the mid-stream of the Yuanjiang-Red River Valley of Yunnan Province. The female genitalia are described for the first time.
Rhinopalpa polynice, China, new record, Yuanjiang-Red River Valley, forestry species
Nymphalidae is a cosmopolitan family of Papilionoidea with high species richness, which includes about 6,100 species in 12 subfamilies and 350 genera (
The genus Rhinopalpa C. & R. Felder, 1860 is placed in subfamily Nymphalinae (
In this study, a female R. polynice was collected from Yuanyang County, southeast Yunnan, China, which sits in the mid-stream of the Yuanjiang-Red River Valley and is isolated from the sites in North Vietnam where R. polynice was previously recorded. The female genitalia are described for the first time. The specimen, collected in this study, is the first record of the genus Rhinopalpa in China. Both specimen and dissected genitalia are deposited in the insect collection of Southwest Forestry University (SFU), Kunming, China.
Spread specimens were photographed by Canon 5DS (Canon, Japan) with medium grey background and the photos were adjusted using Adobe Photoshop CS (Adobe, USA).
To observe the female genitalia, the abdomen was treated with 1 ml 10% sodium hydroxide solution to digest soft tissue at 70℃ for 1 h and then dissected in a water-filled Petri dish under a stereoscope. The genitalia were then transferred to 80% glycerol for 12 h to render them transparent. A solutiion of 2% chlorazol black was used to dye the membranous parts for 10 min in order to obtain better photographic results. Photographs were taken with a Nikon SMZ1500 stereoscope (Nikon, Japan) and automatically stacked using Helicon Focus 7.5.8 (Helicon Software, USA). After observation and photography, a piece of card was cut, the genitalia were fixed to the card by white emulsion and pinned with the specimen to avoid confusion. The photographs were adjusted and arranged using Adobe Photoshop CS (Adobe, USA). Terminology of the female genitalia follows
Female (Fig.
Female genitalia (Fig.
This species is currenly known from India, Myanmar, Laos, Vietnam, Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia and Philippines (
China is a country with high biodiversity of butterflies with about 2020 species in recent records (
In recent years, three cryptic species of butterflies were discovered from Indochina, Graphium (Pazala) daiyuanae Hu, Zhang & Cotton, 2018, Graphium (Pazala) wenlingae Hu, Cotton & Monastyrskii, 2019 and Losaria doubledayi (Wallace, 1865), all of them being forest species (
The authors express their sincere thanks to Adam M. Cotton (Chiang Mai, Thailand), Alexander L. Monarstyrskii (Hanoi, Vietnam), Cheng-Cheng Wang (Kunming, China), Hui Ye (Yunnan University, Kunming, China), Rui-Hang Dong (Harbin, Heilongjiang), Si-Xun Ge (Beijing Forestry University, Beijing, China), Wen-Rui Lou (Nanjing Zhongshan Botanical Garden, Nanjing, China), Xin Zhang (Kunming, China), Yutaka Inayoshi (Chiang Mai, Thailand), Zhen-Bang Xu (Yunnan University, Kunming, China) and Zhen-Jun Wu (Fuzhou, China). The authors also express their sincere thanks to everyone who still support each other in this terrible year under the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic and live with an optimistic attitude no matter how difficult the days have been. This study is supported by the Biodiversity Survey, Observation and Assessment Programme of Ministry of Ecology and Enviromnment and the China BON-Butterflies (SDZXWJZ01013) of Ministry of Ecology and Environment of P. R. China.