Falga athena Grishin, 2023

Zhang, Jing, Cong, Qian & Grishin, Nick V., 2023, Supplementary Materials and Appendix, Insecta Mundi 2023 (26), pp. 1-115 : 78

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.10396362

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03810139-FF90-BB1F-C0CA-FDD0E73BB4F2

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Falga athena Grishin
status

sp. nov.

Falga athena Grishin , new species

https://zoobank.org/ E9BA59DB-2467-42BA-9C5F-BEB41F8CF500

( Fig. 7 part, 191–192, 427–429)

Definition and diagnosis. Phylogenetic trees reveal that a specimen from Panama resembling a darker Falga sciras Godman, 1901 (type locality in Honduras) is not monophyletic with it and shows prominent genetic differentiation from it ( Fig. 7): e.g., their COI barcodes differ by 5.9% (39 bp). This specimen also differs from all other species of Falga Mabille, 1898 (type species Carystus jeconia Butler, 1870 ) and, therefore, represents a new species. This new species (incompletely) keys to Falga jeconia jeconia (I.1.2(b)) in Evans (1955). It differs from F. sciras by lacking a discal brown spot at the end of discal cell on the ventral hindwing and orange spots on the dorsal forewing not reaching the wing base. It differs from other species by orange, rather than yellow or yellow-orange spots and patches on the dorsal side and brown around the tornus on the ventral hindwing. This species is not cryptic and is diagnosed reliably by phenotype. In DNA, a combination of the following base pairs is diagnostic in the nuclear genome:aly 2423.6.2:G57A,aly1838.37.5:T96C, aly666.26.4:A100C,aly542.3.12:C99T, aly 1651.8.4:A153T, aly2548.20.5:C27C (not T), aly725.21.1:A114A (not G), aly208.47.15:T281T (not C), aly7689.2.1:T36T (not C), aly11945.4.1:T2088T (not C), and COI barcode: T250C, T352C, T355A, T530C, A565T.

Barcode sequence of the holotype. Sample NVG-18012E08, GenBank OR837710, 658 base pairs: AACTTTATATTTTATTTTTGGTATTTGAGCAGGAATATTAGGAACTTCTTTAAGTATATTAATTCGTACTGAATTAGGAAATCCAGGATTTTTAATT GGAGATGATCAAATTTATAATACTATTGTTACAGCTCATGCTTTTATTATAATTTTTTTTATAGTTATACCAATTATAATTGGAGGATTTGGAAATT GATTAGTTCCATTAATATTAGGAGCTCCTGATATAGCTTTTCCTCGAATAAATAACATAAGATTTTGAATATTGCCTCCTTCCCTAACATTATTAAT TTCAAGAAGAATTGTTGAAAATGGTGCAGGAACTGGATGAACAGTTTATCCCCCTCTTTCCTCAAATATTGCTCATCAAGGATCTTCTGTTGATTTA GCAATTTTTTCTCTTCATTTAGCTGGAATTTCTTCTATTCTTGGAGCTATTAACTTTATTACTACAATTATTAATATACGAATTAAAAATAGATCAT TTGATCAAATACCATTATTTGTATGATCTGTGGGAATTACAGCACTTTTATTACTTTTATCTTTACCTGTATTAGCAGGTGCTATTACTATACTTCT TACAGATCGAAATCTTAATACATCTTTTTTTGATCCTGCAGGAGGAGGGGATCCAATTTTATATCAACATTTATTT

Type material. Holotype: ♀ deposited in the National Museum of Natural History , Smithsonian Institution,

Washington, DC, USA ( USNM), illustrated in Fig. 191–192, bears the following four rectangular labels, three white: [ PANAMA: Darien | Cana 1550m | 23.III.1983 | leg. G.B.Small], [DNA sample ID: | NVG-18012E08 | c/o

Nick V. Grishin], [USNMENT | {QR Code} | 01450279], and one red [HOLOTYPE ♀ | Falga athena | Grishin]. Type locality. Panama: Darien Province, Cana, elevation 1550 m.

Etymology. Sciras is the surname of Athena, an Olympian goddess. The name athena signifies that the new species is closest in wing pattern to F. sciras . The name is a noun in apposition.

Distribution. Currently known only from the holotype collected in eastern Panama.

USNM

Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History

V

Royal British Columbia Museum - Herbarium

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Lepidoptera

Family

Hesperiidae

Genus

Falga

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