Schinia ferrisi, Pogue, Michael G. & Harp, Charles E., 2004

Pogue, Michael G. & Harp, Charles E., 2004, A review of the Schinia tertia (Grote) species complex (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae: Heliothinae), Zootaxa 473, pp. 1-32 : 15-17

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.157415

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:2A669FFF-2F7F-4481-858A-8524E3AE40AB

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6269758

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/B11687FD-FFAD-FFED-FEE0-FAA5FBEC894F

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Schinia ferrisi
status

sp. nov.

Schinia ferrisi View in CoL , new species

( Figs. 11–12 View FIGURES 7 – 11 View FIGURES 12 – 18 , 22 View FIGURES 19 – 24 , 29–30 View FIGURES 25 – 34 , 37 View FIGURES 35 – 40 , 40, 47 View FIGURE 47 )

Diagnosis. This species is easily confused with albafascia but can be reliably separated by the lack of a hair pencil on the second sternite of the male. The hindwing discal spot in ferrisi is smaller, less quadrate, and more crescent­shaped than the bold quadrate spot in albafascia . The marginal band in the hindwing is generally less bold and narrower in ferrisi than in albafascia . Schinia ferrisi can be separated from tertia by the shorter uncus in the male genitalia.

Description. Adult Male. ( Fig. 11 View FIGURES 7 – 11 ). Head. Frons cream with closely appressed scales, ventral lip produced; vertex cream with broad flat scales, not appressed; labial palps cream; eyes large, round. Thorax. Scales cream mixed with pale rufous; foreleg cream suffused with light brown, tibia on medial margin with one elongate robust spine and 1–3 significantly smaller spines, spines on lateral margin variable with 1–2 thick ones near distal apex and 2–3 smaller ones dorsal to these; basitarsus longer than tibia, all tarsi light brown with white apical bands; middle leg cream, white apical band on tibia, tarsi cream with white apical bands; hind leg white, tarsi white. Forewing. Length 9.0–11.0 mm (n=8); basal area brown, bordered distally by a few black scales, approximately 30% of wing length; median area white, enclosing reniform spot, width at reniform from 30 to 75% of wing length, at posterior margin width from 30–70% of posterior margin length, a thin line of brown scales at border of median area as it curves around reniform spot; orbicular spot faint, pale gray; reniform spot indistinct, bordered proximally and distally by a few black scales; a pale band with a few brown scales at costa, these scales become pale gray as they over scale the reniform spot and continue to posterior margin; subterminal band dark brown, follows curve of white median area, distal margin irregular; a narrow white band distal to subterminal band; outer margin light brown; small black spots between wing veins along outer margin; fringe light brown with a few white scales; underside white with an indistinct black scale patch between veins R and Cu; orbicular spot black; reniform spot black; submarginal band black. Abdomen ( Fig. 22 View FIGURES 19 – 24 ): Second sternite hair pencil absent; scent pocket present on fourth sternite and approximately same width as sternite. Male genitalia ( Figs. 29–30 View FIGURES 25 – 34 ): Uncus of moderate length, length 0.70– 0.725 mm (mean = 0.708 + 0.014; n=3); valve of moderate length, length 2.05– 2.125 mm (mean = 2.08 + 0.038; n=3), length 8.69 + 0.83 X width (n=3); saccus V­shaped; vesica with 3 coils. Female genitalia ( Figs. 37, 40 View FIGURES 35 – 40 ): Papillae anales broadly triangulate, apex narrowly rounded; eighth segment with coarse scobinations; seventh segment with robust, moderate length setae in several rows along distal margin, concentrated dorsally on segment, extending to or beyond distal margin of eighth segment.

Type material. HOLOTYPE: ɗ, Arizona, Pima Co., Redington, Barnes Collection, USNM ENT 0 0 142672. Deposited in USNM.

PARATYPES: Same locality as type: 3 ɗ ( ENT UNSM 142671, 142673­4), USNM genitalia slide 47328, 3 Ψ ( ENT USNM 142675­7), USNM genitalia slides 47329, 47321

( USNM). ARIZONA: PIMA CO., 32° 26.92’ N, 111° 01.33’ W, 2910 ft., 13 Sep. 2003 (1 ɗ), A.D. Zimmerman, 28 Sep. 2003 (1 ɗ), C.D. Ferris (CDF). SANTA CRUZ CO., Santa Rita Mountains, 24 Sep. 1949 (2 ɗ), genitalia slide USNM 47332, F.H. Parker ( USNM); Pena Blanca Lake Campground, 3850 ft., 13 Sep. 1994 (1 Ψ), T.E. Dimock (TED). NEW

MEXICO: GRANT CO., 32° 50.86’ N, 108° 35.55’ W, 4390–4400 ft., 5 Sep. 2002 (2 ɗ, 2 Ψ), male genitalia slide MGP 1179, C.D. Ferris (CDF).

Larval host plant: Unknown.

Etymology: Clifford D. Ferris of Laramie, Wyoming sent me (MGP) specimens that I identified as albafascia . After Dr. Ferris insisted that they looked different, I dissected a male and found that there was no hair pencil, which is prominent in albafascia . We are honored to name this species after Dr. Ferris.

Flight period. This species flies throughout September ( Fig. 45 View FIGURE 45 ).

Distribution ( Fig. 47 View FIGURE 47 ). Known only from southeastern Arizona and southwestern New Mexico.

Discussion. The intensity of the hindwing marginal band is variable, ranging from well developed to faint; it may be almost absent in worn specimens. Schinia albafascia varies in the size and intensity of both the hindwing discal spot and the marginal band.

In reviewing maps (CEH) of Rabbit brush varieties; Ericameria nauseosa nauseosa var. latisquamea (A. Gray) Neesom & Baird overlaps the general distribution of ferrisi . It occurs in Santa Cruz, Pima, Cochise, Apache, and Navaho counties in Arizona; and San Juan, Rio Arriba, and McKinley counties in northwestern New Mexico.

USNM

Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History

ENT

Ministry of Natural Resources

UNSM

University of Nebraska State Museum

NEW

University of Newcastle

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Lepidoptera

Family

Noctuidae

Genus

Schinia

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