Female genital configuration in the classification of Lepidoptera
- 1 June 1974
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in New Zealand Journal of Zoology
- Vol. 1 (2) , 127-146
- https://doi.org/10.1080/03014223.1974.9517821
Abstract
In Coleoptera, Neuroptera, and Megaloptera, and the panorpoid orders Diptera, Trichoptera, and Mecoptera the common oviduct is ventral to, or opens into, the vagina or genital chamber. In Lepidoptera, in the superfamilies Micropterigoidea, Eriocranioidea, Incurvarioidea, and Nepticuloidea, the common oviduct enters the copulatory chamber ventrally; in Mnesarchaeidae, Hepialoidea, and all Ditrysia auct. the common oviduct is dorsal to the copulatory chamber, and the vagina (that region posterior to the entry of the spermatheca) opens separately from the genital ostium. Lepidoptera are unique in the complex and various arrangements of the ectodermal elements in the female genitalia. The arrangements of, and connections between rectal and genital structures in representatives of Megaloptera, Neuroptera, and the panorpoid orders are re‐examined for comparison with the systems found in Zeugloptera, Dacnonypha, Monotrysia, and Ditrysia auct. The Zeugloptera are here included in Lepidoptera because they have a circumcloacal chamber. Other female zeuglopteran genital structures intergrade with those of Dacnonypha, here restricted to Eriocraniidae, Agathiphagidae, Lophocoronidae, and the divergent Acanthopteroctetes. Dacnonypha have a less specialised spermathecal and vaginal structure than do most of the Monotrysia, here restricted to Incurvarioidea and Nepticuloidea (including Tischeriidae); many Monotrysia lack a cloaca, whereas it is always present in Dacnonypha. There is no basis for retaining either Mnesarchaeidae or Hepialoidea in Monotrysia auct., as the dorsal common oviduct and the two genital openings indicate that these groups are ditrysian. They are here regarded as exoporian Ditrysia, a group characterised by the lack of a free, tubular ductus seminalis. A fixed gutter or channel between ostium and ovipore characterises the Hepialoidea, and the absence of this channel (ostium and ovipore opposable within an external genital pouch) characterises Mnesarchaeidae. The endoporian Ditrysia all have a free, tubular ductus seminalis; where a cloaca is present it is incomplete, i.e., combines ovipore and rectum but never copulatory structures, in contrast to the complete cloaca found in Zeugloptera, Dacnonypha, and many Monotrysia. The endoporian Ditrysia comprise all other superfamilies, i.e., about 97% of species of Lepidoptera.Keywords
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