Agnesiella (D.) stipitata Huang & Zhang sp. nov.

(Figs 51, 54, 57, 60, 175–182)

Measurement. Male, 3.25 mm (including wings).

Body dirty yellow (Figs 51, 54). Face with sides of frontoclypeal area and anteclypeus respectively brownish and dark brown, central area yellowish, outer margin of gena brown and remaining parts black-brown, dark brown transverse streaks on frontoclypeal area (Fig. 60). Vertex light yellow ochre near coronal suture. Pronotum with 5 patches black-brown and central part suffused with brownish. Scutellum yellow ochre with triangles dark brown and distal end dark brown (Fig. 57). Forewing with 2 banded brownish patches respectively at base and central part of basal half; brochosome field brownish (Figs 51, 54, 175).

Abdominal apodemes reaching end of 6th abdominal sternite. Male pygofer side with 2 bands of fine setae longitudinally on medial side of triangular sclerotized band; a long digitiform appendage arising from posteroventral margin and directed dorsad (Figs 176, 177). Subgenital plate with stipitiform protrusion bearing 3 peg-like setae apically (Figs 178, 179). Paramere with caudal apex sharp and thin, subapical protrusion small (Figs 178, 180). Connective with stem shorter than lateral arms and central lobe absent (Fig. 178). Aedeagal shaft slender with lamellar dorsal subapical extension subtriangular, ventral appendage with apex long, digitiform and pointing to apex of shaft (Figs 181, 182).

Specimens examined. Holotype: ♂, CHINA, Guizhou Province, Guiyang, 1000m, 25-V-1981, coll. Fasheng Li. Paratype: 1♂ 3♀, same data as holotype .

Etymology. The specific name is derived from Latin word “stipitatus which means “petiolate, referring to the handle-like subapical protrusion of the subgenital plate (Fig. 179).

Notes. The new species resembles Agnesiella (Draberiella) lata sp. nov., but differs in the male pygofer side with a longer appendage (Fig. 177), in the subgenital plate with a stipitiform subapical protrusion bearing 3 peg-like setae (Fig. 179), and in the aedeagal shaft not narrowed subapically in posterior view (Fig. 182) with the apical part of the ventral appendage longer (Fig. 181).