Sarata tephrella Ragonot, 1893

Ferris, Clifford D. & Nordin, John S., 2004, Taxonomic note on Sarata tephrella Ragonot (Lepidoptera: Pyraloidea: Pyralidae: Phycitinae), Zootaxa 569 (1), pp. 1-7 : 2-6

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.569.1.1

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5536998

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/2E188788-FFAA-FFEB-BB22-FC18FE6794CB

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Sarata tephrella Ragonot
status

 

Sarata tephrella Ragonot View in CoL

MALE

Diagnosis. Separated from similar species by its small size, dark thorax, pale grayish color, and absence of well­defined dorsal forewing transverse bands.

Description ( Figs. 3–5 View FIGURES 3–4 View FIGURES 5–6 ). Forewing length (base to apex): 11–16 mm. Head ( Fig. 5 View FIGURES 5–6 ): Antennae with small spined tuft at base of shaft; labial palpi long, slender, porrect with mosaic of pale grayish brown and dark brown scales on dorsal ridge and laterally, changing to white basally below eye; frons, collar clothed in dark brownish­black to black scales, some white­tipped, with narrow fringe of whitish scales above eyes. Body: Thorax clothed in dark brownish gray to black scales, some basally pale with dark tips; abdomen covered with pale grayish brown scales, ventrally with pale distal terminal scales on each segment; legs covered with mixture of whitish and pale grayish brown scales with suggestion of weakly defined alternating light and dark bands. Wings ( Figs. 3–4 View FIGURES 3–4 ): Dorsal color of forewings variable from pale gray to drab charcoal gray; maculation varies from nearly absent to a weak bicolored postmedial band, whitish distad, blackish basad, with a weak dark antemedial band, very thin and poorly defined dark terminal band; fringe with basal row of short white­tipped pale grayish brown scales and outer row of similar but longer scales; hindwings thinly scaled, uniformly pale brownish­gray with terminal line and fringe similar to forewing; ventral wings uniformly medium grayish­brown. The type of S. tephrella was described as having the dorsal forewing heavily dusted with white. Upon magnification, fresh specimens that we collected manifested overlying white scales. As the moths age during flight, the white scales slough off exposing underlying gray, brownish, and charcoal gray scales, many of which are white­tipped. Aged individuals present a rather drab charcoal gray aspect. In flight, the moths appear pale gray regardless of age. Genitalia ( Figs. 7–11 View FIGURES 7–11 ; 17 dissections from 5 localities). The small process located toward the base of the costa varies in size from essentially absent to that shown in Fig. 8 View FIGURES 7–11 (arrow). Heinrich’s illustration (Fig. 405) does not show this feature, and the process was either absent, or so small that it was flattened against the costa and rendered invisible when the slide was prepared. The vesica is armed with a large, hollow, and robust spine and a small distorted crescentic chitinous piece, which is variable in size, shape, and degree of chitinization. Figs. 9–10 View FIGURES 7–11 illustrate variation in the aedoeagus. Fig. 11 View FIGURES 7–11 shows the everted vesica. The robust spine is seated at the base of the funnel­shaped end of a diverticulum that has a stiff membrane; further eversion cannot be obtained by pulling on the spine. There is a large scobinate patch on the surface of the vesica (double arrows Figs. 10–11 View FIGURES 7–11 ). The eighth abdominal segment and ventrolateral tufts of the specimens dissected agreed with Heinrich’s drawings (Fig. 405b). Based on the illustrations in Heinrich, the male genitalia of tephrella and rubrithoracella (Barnes & McDunnough) are very similar. The latter species, however, is reported to have a rufous­ochreous shading on the thorax, while the thorax of tephrella is very dark brownish gray to nearly black.

FEMALE

Diagnosis. Female genitalia has fine spining on corpus bursae that occupies only onequarter or less rather than the anterolateral half as in epsilon Heinrich , and of different shape and broader extent than in delta Heinrich.

Description ( Figs. 6 View FIGURES 5–6 , 12–14 View FIGURES 12–13 View FIGURE 14 ). Forewing length (base to apex): 8–10 mm. Head ( Fig. 6 View FIGURES 5–6 ): Antennae simple; labial palpi porrect with white­tipped black scales on dorsal ridge, laterally covered with black scales with abrupt change to white scales ventrally and at base; frons, collar clothed in dark brownish­black to black scales, some white­tipped (as in males). Body: Thorax, abdomen, legs as in males. Wings ( Figs. 12–13 View FIGURES 12–13 ): Forewings short and stubby compared to males, with rounded outer margin; antemedial band white basad, black distad, complete postmedial black band with narrow white edging distad; two vertical black discal spots (absent in some specimens) separated by a narrow lateral band of white scales, narrow black terminal line, fringe with basal row of short white­tipped dark gray scales and outer row of long paler gray white­tipped scales, remaining wing areas covered by white­tipped blackish scales producing a dark gray aspect; hindwings uniformly medium brownish­gray with terminal line and fringe similar to forewing; ventral wings uniformly medium grayish­brown. Genitalia ( Fig. 14a, b View FIGURE 14 ; 2 View FIGURES 1–2 dissections). Membranous ostium bursae; simple ductus bursae, shorter than corpus bursae; corpus bursae with patch of microspines covering the fundus and about one­quarter of the anterolateral surface; ductus seminalis emerges close to middle of corpus bursae.

Material examined: WYOMING, Albany Co., ca. 41°17.88’N, 105°31.51’W, 2285 m, 39 males taken in UV­light traps (separated about 0.45 km) approximately 2 km east of Laramie with early and late dates ranging from 26 March–14 May 1992 –2004; GoogleMaps 41° 17.9’N, 105°30.4’W, 2287 m, 13.iv.2003 (1f, JSN); GoogleMaps 41°18.50’N, 105°30.75’W, 2333 m, 13.iv.2003 (5m, JSN), 30.iii–4.iv.2004 (101m, 17f, CDF, JSN) ; 41°13.8’N, 105°22.6’W, 2535m, UV­light trap, JSN, 1988: 30.iv (1m), 5.v (1m); 41° 13.5’N, 105° 22.5’W, 2545 m, 23.v.2003 (4m, UV­light trap, JSN); COLORADO, Larimer Co., T[ownship] 9N, R[ange] 71W, S[ection] 4, hill S. of Lone Pine Creek , 1950 m, 30.iv.88 (1m, JSN), 11.iv.2003 (6m, UV­light trap, JSN).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Lepidoptera

SuperFamily

Pyraloidea

Family

Pyralidae

SubFamily

Phycitinae

Genus

Sarata

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