Chilo auricilius Dudgeon, 1905
publication ID |
https://doi.org/10.18061/bssb.v3i2.9527 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15117081 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03EDD027-FF9F-C856-7799-65D4FCC7E30B |
treatment provided by |
Jonas |
scientific name |
Chilo auricilius Dudgeon, 1905 |
status |
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Chilo auricilius Dudgeon, 1905
Figs. 35 View Figs 32-39 , 95 View Figs 94-99 , 153 View Figs 152-155 .
Chilo auricilia Dudgeon, 1905: 405 . Type locality: India, Burogah, N. Bihar.
= Diatraea auricilia (Dudgeon) : Fletcher 1928: 58; Gupta 1940: 799.
= Chilotraea auricilia (Dudgeon) : Kapur 1950: 408.
= Chilo popescugorji Błeszyński, 1963: 179 View in CoL , fig. 63, type locality: Taiwan, China; Bleszynski, 1970: 135 (syn.).
MATERIAL
7 ♀ (detailed information on Table S1; https://doi.org/ 10.5061/dryad.b8gtht7mh) .
SIMILAR SPECIES
Chilo polychrysus (Meyrick, 1932) .
DIAGNOSIS
Chilo auricilius , also known as the Gold-fringed Stemborer, is a widespread species in South-East Asia. It can be recognized by the silver suffusion as well as the thickly marked silver median line in males and females ( Fig. 35 View Figs 32-39 ). This species is highly similar to Chilo polychrysus in habitus, which led to erroneous reports from the Philippines ( Barrion et al., 1990). Examination of male genitalia ( Fig. 95 View Figs 94-99 ) enables unambiguous identification of this species: pars basalis at base of valva absent (thorn-shaped pars basalis at base of valva in C. polychrysus ); saccus narrow, conspicuously protruding anterad; juxta with two medium-length symmetrical arms not extending beyond basal-costal angle of valva, straight (two arms curved around the phallus in C. polychrysus ); phallus with ventro-lateral arms roughly curved, reaching subapical part of phallus (strongly curved, reaching apex of phallus in C. polychrysus ); phallus with subapical conical bump and small bulbose basal projection (both absent in C. polychrysus ). In female genitalia ( Fig. 153 View Figs 152-155 ), the following characters distinguish this species from congeneric species: short ring-shaped sclerotized antrum; ductus bursae narrow, ca 1.5 X length of corpus bursae; corpus bursae progressively widening, pear-shaped, without signum. Chilo polychrysus exhibits a conspicuous C-shaped sclerotization at antrum, on each side of ductus opening, which enables unambiguous recognition of the species.
DISTRIBUTION
Most of South-East Asia (Sugar Research Australia). PHILIPPINES: Luzon (Batangas, Cagayan, Laguna, Quezon, Zambales), Panay (Iloilo), Mindanao (Davao Oriental, Misamis Oriental, Sirugao del Sur) ( Litsinger et al., 2011). Collected at altitudes between 50 and 850 m on the Philippines.
DNA BARCODING
A maximum p-distance of 0.33% is observed between specimens MFNLEP-PYRALPHIL07-B08 from Mindanao (Surigao) and MFNLEP-PYRALPHIL07-H09 from Luzon (Quezon). Haplotype network reconstruction including all available BOLD sequences reveal that the Philippine haplotype is identical to a haplotype found elsewhere in Australia and India.
REMARKS
This Chilo species is a pest of sugarcane in South-East Asia. It also feeds on rice, maize, and sorghum ( Bleszynski, 1970c; Litsinger et al., 2011; Maes, 2022). In a survey of Chilo species on rice in the Philippines, C. auricilius accounted for 73% of the total number of specimens collected, while C. polychrysus was not recorded ( Barrion et al., 1990). Broad distribution of Chilo auricilius over the Philippines is the result of rice culture expansion over the archipelago.
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Crambinae |
Genus |
Chilo auricilius Dudgeon, 1905
Léger, Théo 2024 |
Chilo popescugorji Błeszyński, 1963: 179
Bleszynski, S. 1970: 135 |