Phavaraea dilatata (Walker), 1854

Miller, James S, 2009, Generic Revision Of The Dioptinae (Lepidoptera: Noctuoidea: Notodontidae) Part 2: Josiini, Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 2009 (321), pp. 675-1022 : 731-732

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1206/321.1-1

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03FF87E0-FF8D-9E78-BF50-13C4FEDA4F1D

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Phavaraea dilatata (Walker)
status

 

Phavaraea dilatata (Walker) View in CoL Figures 305E–G View Fig , 306B View Fig , 307 View Fig ; plate 28 [EX]

Josia dilatata Walker, 1854: 316 View in CoL .

TYPE LOCALITY: Brazil.

TYPE: Syntype 3, Bates Collection ( BMNH).

DISCUSSION: Phavaraea dilatata can be distinguished from other members of the genus because the FW is more elongate (pl. 28), and the FW veins are lined with light brown scales as they run through the dark brown ground color; in other Phavaraea the FW veins are concolorous. Males exhibit a complex, and unique, set of androconia providing for easy recognition. First, the HW is extremely full with a greatly expanded anal margin (fig. 306B), held folded around the abdomen ( Walker, 1854). Within this fold, the HW margin bears long, pedicellate, light gray androconia interspersed with even longer, brown lanceolate ones. On the abdomen itself there are two types of androconia: (1) long, blackish-brown bristles arising from the pleuron of A4–A6; and (2) elongate blackish-brown scales on the dorsum of A5–A7. The blackish bristles alone make the moth instantly recognizable. How the various parts of this male system function together during courtship is unknown.

Phavaraea dilatata is relatively rare. My survey of the world’s collections uncovered a total of 24 specimens (1933, 5♀♀), most of these captured well over 100 years ago. The largest series, at the ZMH, contains six males and two females, originally from the Staudinger Collection, all in beautiful condition ( Brazil, Novo Friburgo). Three specimens document the species’ occurrence in Suriname (13) and French Guiana (13, 1♀), while the remainder were collected in eastern Brazil, in the vicinity of Rio de Janeiro. The genitalia of moths from these rather disjunct localities are identical.

DISTRIBUTION: Brazil (BMNH, CAS, MCZ, MNHN, OUMNH, VOB, ZMH); French Guiana (CAS); Suriname (BMNH).

DISSECTED: 3, Suriname, BMNH (genitalia slide no. JSM-346 ) ; 3, Brazil, Espírito Santo, R. H. Stretch Collection, CAS (genitalia slide no. JSM-1743 , wing slide no. JSM-1667 ) ; ♀, Brazil, Rio de Janeiro, San Fidelis, Sto. Antonio dos Brotos, 1876 –1882, leg. August Vincent de Lyon , BMNH (genitalia slide no. JSM-347 ) .

R

Departamento de Geologia, Universidad de Chile

CAS

California Academy of Sciences

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Lepidoptera

Family

Notodontidae

Genus

Phavaraea

Loc

Phavaraea dilatata (Walker)

Miller, James S 2009
2009
Loc

Josia dilatata

Walker, F. 1854: 316
1854
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