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  • 1
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    Unknown
    In:  Zoologische Verhandelingen vol. 158 no. 1, pp. 3-55
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: In 1913, Edward Meyrick removed several genera from his compound family Yponomeutidae and united them in a new group, "Glyphipterygidae". After 1954, this name has been used generally, often in the emended spelling "Glyphipterigidae". The family name was not new but used by Meyrick in an entirely different sense. Former authors (Zeller, 1839; Stainton, 1854; Frey, 1856, etc.) indicated with the name "Glyphipterygidae" only one of the two main groups of Meyrick\'s enlarged concept, viz., the "Glyphipteryginae" or the "Glyphipterygidae sensu stricto".\nIn spite of its existence during quite a long time, Meyrick\'s family " Glyphiteryginae" proved to be an unsatisfactory combination. In later years, especially recently, its highly heterogeneous character became more and more apparent and its slow but steady demolition started: one after another genus was transferred to different, often remote, families. This is not surprising, because Meyrick used for the combination of his group only superficial characters, viz., wing venation, external anatomy and even superficial resemblance. Modern lepidopterists, armed with the data on internal anatomy, especially those of the genital characters, attacked the group vigorously.\nDuring a revisionary study of the group for a volume of the series "Microlepidoptera Palaearctica", the present author was also confronted with the necessity of still further changes and of a revision of most of his earlier statements concerning this group.\nThe present paper represents the results of one of these major changes, viz., the removal of tortricoid elements from Meyrick\'s "Glyphipterygidae" and their transfer to the tribe Hilarographini Diakonoff, 1977, of the subfamily Chlidanotinae Diakonoff, 1960, of the family Tortricidae Latreille [1802-1803].\nThis is also the first record of the peculiar chiefly tropical subfamily Chlidanotinae in the Palaearctic and Nearctic regions.
    Keywords: Yponomeutidae ; Glyphipterygidae ; Hilarographini Diakonoff ; Chlidanotinae Diakonoff ; taxonomic revision ; new taxa
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 2
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  Zoologische Mededelingen vol. 54 no. 21, pp. 291-312
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: The present paper contains descriptions of one genus of the Hilarographini (Tortricidae), three species, one subspecies, with one forma, of the Choreutidae, and six species with one forma, of the Glyphipterigidae, all groups formerly having been assigned to the so-called Glyphipterigidae auctorum.\nThese taxa will be illustrated in the forthcoming revisionary volume of the complex "family" in the series "Microlepidoptera Palaearctica", now in preparation. The new descriptions are published here, in order not to delay their appearance unduly.\nThe whereabouts of the type specimens are indicated with abbreviations, of which a list will be found at the last page of this paper. The author is grateful for the permission to retain certain duplicates for the collection of this museum. The drawings of the genitalia are by Messrs. A. C. M. van Dijk, the Hague, and J. J. A. M. Wessendorp, of this museum; some sketches are by the author.\nCharitographa gen. nov. (\xcf\x87\xce\xb1\xcf\x81\xce\xb9\xcf\x84\xce\xbf\xce\xb3\xcf\x81\xce\xac\xcf\x86\xce\xbf\xcf\x82 = charmingly marked) Superficially similar to Thaumatographa Walsingham, 1897, but female genitalia with a ductus bursae rather wide throughout, with its lower half and the corpus bursae densely clothed inside with a layer of modified, stiff, asteroid and pedunculate spines, arranged regularly and forming a continuous layer, while a signum or signa are absent; lobi anales soldered into a stiff tube, open and narrowed towards top. The male genitalia with the aedeagus robust and shorter than valva.\nType-species, Hilarographa micadonis Stringer, 1930, Japan.\nThe monobasic genus seems to be a peculiar development of Thaumato-
    Keywords: Lepidoptera ; Hilarographini (Tortricidae) ; Glyphipterigidae auctorum ; new taxa
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
    Format: application/pdf
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