Coleophora cantabrica Baldizzone, sp. nov. a new species from Spain. Coleophora repentis Klimesch, 1947 new species for the Iberian Peninsula . Contribution to the knowledge of Coleophoridae CLVI (Lepidoptera: Coleophoridae)

The publication deals with the description of Coleophora cantabrica Baldizzone, sp. nov., species of the Cantabrian Mountains and Sierra de Gredos belonging to the group of C. genistae Stainton, 1857, close to C. oreiosella Baldizzone, 2019. C. repentis Klimesch, 1947 is also reported, for the first time from Spain and the Iberian Peninsula.


Introduction
The fauna of the Spanish Coleophoridae is among the richest in Europe and certainly still contains many species to be added, including some not yet described.Over the years I have had the opportunity to study numerous specimens collected by various lepidopterologists, identifying most of the species, but many still remain to be determined with certainty, for various reasons, such as the small number of specimens, or belonging to difficult groups for which an overall review is necessary and difficulty in obtaining a result with DNA examination especially from specimens not collected in recent years.Last year I received many specimens collected by Toni Mayr (Feldkirch, Austria) collected in various areas of Spain, especially in the northern part.Among these I discovered a new species from the Cantabrian Mountains belonging to the group of Coleophora genistae Stainton, 1957 which is described below with the name C. cantabrica Baldizzone, sp.nov.Further specimens were detected from the collection of T. & K. Nupponen (Espoo, Finland), collected from the Sierra de Gredos Mountain range.I also identified a specimen of C. repentis Klimesch, 1947, a species new to Spain and the Iberian Peninsula.

Material and methods
The Euparal slide mounts of dissected genitalia were photographed with a Bresser 5.0 camera attached to a Bresser BioScienze 40-1000x trinocular microscope, using a Leitz PL Fluotar 6.3 / 0.20 objective.The images were edited in Corel Paint Shop Pro.The habitus was photographed with a Canon EOS 5D Mark II digital camera equipped with a Canon MP-E 65 mm objective, with lighting provided by two circular neon lamps OSRAM L 32W / 8400 C (cool white).The CombineZP program was used for stacking layers into deep-focus images.Morphological terms follow Baldizzone (2019a).Diagnosis: Medium-small sized species, with ochreous-brown forewing and white costal stripe.It belongs to the group of Coleophora genistae Stainton, 1857 and based on the male genitalia it is similar to C. oreiosella Baldizzone, 2019, a species known only from the high altitudes of Sierra Nevada (Spain) of which the female is unknown.In comparison with that of C. oreiosella, the male genitalia of C. cantabrica shows the following differences: the tegumen is slightly longer and trapezoidal, and the pedunculus is shorter; the valvula is broader and lacks the robust short seta erect on the edge at the base of the cucullus; the sacculus is longer and thinner, with a more curved ventral edge; the phallotheca is longer and dorsally not sclerified; the cornuti are much more numerous and thinner.The female genitalia somewhat resemble that of C. vulpecula Zeller, 1849.The main differences are as follows: in C. cantabrica the papillae anales are longer and narrower; the sterigma is higher and the two oblique folds on its surface are thicker; the colliculum is wider; the corpus bursae is much smaller, oval and not sac-shaped, and the signum is markedly larger.
Description (Figure 1): Wingspan 12-13 mm.Head white, almost completely yellow dorsally.Antenna white ringed with brown; scape white with tuft of light ochreous short erect scales.Labial palpus white, suffused with brown on the outer side; the third segment is about two-thirds length of the second.Proboscis of normal shape.Thorax white, tinged with yellow in the median part, tegula yellow.Forewing ochreous-brown, slightly tinged with yellow in the dorsal half with four white stripes: costal stripe very narrow in basal one-fifth, then wider up to the apex, a very thin barely visible stripe along the edge of the cell, an incomplete stripe wider at the base along the anal fold, dorsal stripe wider at the base and then progressively narrower; costal fringes white, apical ochreousbrown, dorsal fringes light grey suffused with pale yellow.Hindwing grey; with light ochreous-grey fringes.Abdomen dirty white.
Abdominal structures (Figures 7, 10): No posterior lateral strut, transverse strut with proximal edge slightly curved, more sclerotized in middle, distal edge arched and thicker in the male, while in the female the transverse strut is thinner with a straight proximal edge and a distal edge slightly arched, not medially sclerotized.Tergal discs (3rd tergite) length about 3.5 times their width, covered with about 45-50 small conical spines in the male; in the female the tergal discs are twice their width.
Male genitalia (Figures 4-6): Gnathos knob globular.Tegumen large, subtrapezoidal, slightly constricted medially, pedunculus short.Transtilla short, triangular.Valvula large, subtrapezoidal, slightly curved on dorsal edge, inclined on the outer edge.Cucullus elongated, slightly narrower at the base, club-shaped.Sacculus small, with slightly inclined ventral edge, curved outer edge, inclined and more sclerotized dorsal edge.Phallotheca conical, slightly curved, more sclerotized at the base.Numerous cornuti, of different lengths, collected in a long braid, progressively longer towards the apex where some protrude elongated and divergent.
Female genitalia (Figures 8-9): Papillae anales elongated oval.Apophyses posteriores twice as long as anteriores.Sterigma subtrapezoidal, with curved distal border bristling with setae of different lengths, deeply hollowed by the sinus vaginalis; on the surface there are two curved longitudinal folds on the sides of the colliculum starting from the base of the apophyses posteriores and ending at the level of the distal end of the colliculum.Ostium bursae oval.Colliculum as long as the sterigma, large, calyx-shaped, crossed by the broad medial line which widens in a funnel shape and divides at the distal part of the colliculum following the edges.Ductus bursae: the posterior part is wrapped in small spines in the distal section, about 3 times the length of the sterigma, while in the central convoluted part, where the median line begins, it is transparent; the anterior part of the ductus is completely transparent, coiled, about as long as the sterigma.Corpus bursae round with a large anchor-shaped signum Bionomy: Unknown.Distribution: The new species was collected in Spain in the Cantabrian Mountains in the Picos de Europa area and the Sierra de Gredos at an altitude between 1230 and 1650 m.
Etymology: The name derives from the Cantabrian Mountains, where the species was found.