Vanima palladia (Butler, 1867) Zacca & Casagrande & Mielke & Huertas & Espeland & Freitas & Willmott & Nakahara & Lamas, 2020

Zacca, Thamara, Casagrande, Mirna M., Mielke, Olaf H. H., Huertas, Blanca, Espeland, Marianne, Freitas, André V. L., Willmott, Keith R., Nakahara, Shinichi & Lamas, Gerardo, 2020, Revalidation of Vareuptychia Forster, 1964, description of Vanima gen. nov., and notes on Euptychia cleophes Godman & Salvin, 1889 (Lepidoptera: Nymphalidae Satyrinae), Zootaxa 4858 (1), pp. 1-34 : 20-22

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4858.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:4CDBAC51-FBCA-4157-B361-F56CA3EAC107

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4506610

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/D33D878E-FFA7-7470-FF33-FAD25067FDEC

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Vanima palladia (Butler, 1867)
status

comb. nov.

Vanima palladia (Butler, 1867) comb. nov.

( Figs. 38–41 View FIGURES 30–41 , 44–46 View FIGURES 42–44 View FIGURES 45–46 , 52–56 View FIGURES 47–61 , 66–67 View FIGURES 62–67 , 70 View FIGURE 70 , 73 View FIGURES 71–73 )

Euptychia palladia Butler, 1867a: 461 , pl. 39, fig. 21; syntypes: [ Brazil, Pará], Tapajós.— Butler, 1868: 16.— Kirby, 1871: 48.— Butler, 1877: 118.—Weymer, 1911: 200, pl. 47b.— Kaye, 1921: 57.— Riley & Gabriel, 1924: 42.— Aurivillius, 1929: 158.— Gaede, 1931: 459.— Bryk, 1953: 60.— Barcant, 1970 [misidentification]: 143, 161, pl. 13, fig. 9 (male).

Argyreuptychia palladia View in CoL ; Forster, 1964: 123.— Lewis, 1973: pl.58, fig. 17.

Cissia palladia ; Lamas, 1981: 29.— Singer et al., 1983: 109, figs. 2E, 3E, 4E; lectotype female: [ Brazil, Pará], Tapajós; NHMUK (examined).— DeVries, 1987: 274, pl. 48, fig. 28 (male).—Singer & Ehrlich, 1993: 250.— Lamas, 1994: 165.— Robbins et al., 1996: 231. — Ramos, 2000: 40.— Lamas, 2004: 218.— Beccaloni et al., 2008: 329.— Brévignon & Benmesbah, 2012: 40, pl. 4, fig. 5a (male genitalia).— Montero-Abril & Ortiz-Pérez, 2013: 58.— Cock, 2014: 11.

Euptychia pallidia [sic]; D’Abrera, 1988: 761 (male, female).

Diagnosis. Vanima palladia comb. nov. differs from its congeners by its smaller size (FW length: 16–18 mm), the VFW having two developed but faded ocelli in M 2 -M 3 and M 3 -CuA 1 and by having the rufous spot at the tornus smaller and more elongate rather than quadrate (well developed and quadrate in V. labe comb. nov. and V. lesbia comb. nov.) ( Figs. 39, 41 View FIGURES 30–41 ).

Male genitalia ( Figs. 52–56 View FIGURES 47–61 ). In addition to the characters mentioned in the generic description, the apex of valva is broad and strongly serrated.

Female genitalia ( Figs. 66–67 View FIGURES 62–67 ). In addition to the characters mentioned in the generic description, the lateral plate reaches the 8 th tergite, the ductus bursae is short and the signa are located dorso-laterally.

Variation. Females have a rounded FW (triangular in males), well developed subapical ocellus in M 1 -M 2 on the DFW (absent in males), and the VFW with the median and submarginal lines farther away from each other than they are in males. In both sexes, the ocelli in M 2 -M 3 and M 3 -CuA 1 on the VFW can be faded in some individuals, but always present.

Ecology and distribution. This species is distributed widely from Nicaragua to Colombia, Trinidad and Tobago, French Guiana (St-Laurent du Maroni), Brazil (Acre, Roraima, Rondônia, Amazonas, Maranhão, Pernambuco, Alagoas, Goiás and Mato Grosso), Peru (Cuzco, Loreto and Madre de Dios) and Bolivia (El Beni) ( Singer et al. 1983; DeVries, 1987; Singer & Ehrlich 1993; Brévignon & Benmesbah, 2012; plus examined material) at altitudes up to 1400 m ( Fig. 70 View FIGURE 70 ). According to DeVries (1987), V. palladia comb. nov. is rare in Costa Rica, being known only from remnant forests near Atenas. The species flies throughout the year. Similar to V. labe comb. nov., the peak of abundance of V. palladia comb. nov. is during the dry season in Trinidad ( Singer et al. 1983). The species occurs very locally in association with deciduous and premontane forests, along riparian edges ( Fig. 73 View FIGURES 71–73 ) ( Singer et al. 1983; DeVries, 1987). Recorded larval host plants include undetermined species of Cyperus L. and Seleria (Cyperaceae) , Ichnanthus pallens (Sw.) , Lasiacis sloanei (Griseb.) , Oplismenus hirtellus (L.), Panicum pilosum Sw. , P. polygonatum Schrad. , Paspalum conjugatum P. J. Bergius , Pasp. convexum Willd. ex Döll , Pasp. decumbens Sw. , Setaria paniculifera (Steud.) E. Fourn. (= S. palmifolia (J. Koenig) Stapf and Tripsacum sp. ( Poaceae ) (Singer et al. 1971; Singer et al. 1983; DeVries 1987; Ackery 1988; Singer & Erhlich 1993; Beccaloni et al. 2008). Nevertheless, most of these records, and perhaps all of them, come from larvae reared in captivity, and it is not clear whether the host plant used in nature is known. Descriptions of the egg and all four instars (coloration and head capsule shape) are given by Singer et al. (1983).

Type material, lectotype designation and taxonomic history. Euptychia palladia Butler, 1867 was described based on an unstated number of specimens collected by H. W. Bates in Tapajós, Pará, Brazil. The female lectotype of E. palladia ( Fig. 44 View FIGURES 42–44 ) was designated by Singer et al. (1983) and is deposited at the NHMUK .

The specimen cited and illustrated as E. palladia in Weymer (1911: 200, pl. 47b) corresponds to ‘ Cissia’ myncea (Cramer, 1780) (see discussion below), as also pointed out by Singer & Ehrlich (1993). Weymer described his specimen as having five ocelli on the VHW, which disagrees with the original description of E. palladia , which noted six ocelli on the VHW, including a reduced ocellus in 2A and the inner margin ( Butler, 1867a: 462). Barcant (1970) also misidentified ‘ Cissia’ myncea as E. palladia . Brown et al. (2007) cited Cissia sp. nr. palladia from Quibdó, Chocó, Colombia, but it has not been possible to locate this specimen.

Forster (1964) transferred E. palladia to Argyreuptychia . Subsequently, this species was transferred to Cissia ( Singer et al. 1983) and placed in the ‘ labe subgroup’ together with C. labe and C. penelope . This classification was followed by Lamas (2004), but recently Zacca et al. (2018b) suggested that the species would need to be removed from Cissia based on morphological (wing pattern, venation, male and female genitalia) and molecular data (nuclear and mitochondrial markers).

Examined material. 41 males and 56 females (7 specimens dissected)—see Supporting Information (S2).

NHMUK

Natural History Museum, London

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Lepidoptera

Family

Nymphalidae

Genus

Vanima

Loc

Vanima palladia (Butler, 1867)

Zacca, Thamara, Casagrande, Mirna M., Mielke, Olaf H. H., Huertas, Blanca, Espeland, Marianne, Freitas, André V. L., Willmott, Keith R., Nakahara, Shinichi & Lamas, Gerardo 2020
2020
Loc

Euptychia pallidia

D'Abrera, B. L. 1988: 761
1988
Loc

Cissia palladia

Cock, M. J. W. 2014: 11
Montero-Abril, F. & Ortiz-Perez, M. 2013: 58
Brevignon, C. & Benmesbah, M. 2012: 40
Beccaloni, G. W. & Viloria, A. L. & Hall, S. K. & Robinson, G. S. 2008: 329
Lamas, G. 2004: 218
Ramos, F. A. 2000: 40
Robbins, R. K. & Lamas, G. & Mielke, O. H. H. & Harvey, D. J. & Casagrande, M. M. 1996: 231
Lamas, G. 1994: 165
DeVries, P. J. 1987: 274
Singer, M. C. & DeVries, P. J. & Ehrlich, P. R. 1983: 109
Lamas, G. 1981: 29
1981
Loc

Argyreuptychia palladia

Forster, W. 1964: 123
1964
Loc

Euptychia palladia

Bryk, F. 1953: 60
Gaede, M. 1931: 459
Aurivillius, P. O. C. 1929: 158
Riley, N. D. & Gabriel, A. G. 1924: 42
Kaye, W. J. 1921: 57
Butler, A. G. 1877: 118
Kirby, W. F. 1871: 48
Butler, A. G. 1868: 16
Butler, A. G. 1867: 461
1867
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