Charadra coyopa Schmidt & Anweiler, 2010

Schmidt, Christian & Anweiler, Gary, 2010, The North American species of Charadra Walker, with a revision of the Charadra pata (Druce) group (Noctuidae, Pantheinae), ZooKeys 39 (39), pp. 161-181 : 175-176

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.3897/zookeys.39.432

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:F4D24A8D-3EBF-4688-910D-413E328F92BF

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3788576

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C3A359C5-34C7-4A8A-BB1D-B6DFCD099CE8

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:C3A359C5-34C7-4A8A-BB1D-B6DFCD099CE8

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Charadra coyopa Schmidt & Anweiler
status

sp. nov.

Charadra coyopa Schmidt & Anweiler , sp. n.

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:C3A359C5-34C7-4A8A-BB1D-B6DFCD099CE8

Figs 10, 26

Type material. Holotype ♁ – MEXICO: “10268 / Mexico, D. F. [Distrito Federal, Mexico City] / 17 – I – 1946 ” [white handwritten label]; “ T. Escalante / Collection / through / A. C. Allyn, 1974” [white typed label]; “Photographed / by JDG 1001” [pink typed label]; “ HOLOTYPE / C haradra coyopa / Schmidt & Anweiler” [red label]. USNM.

Etymology. The name is derived from Mayan mythology. Coyopa is the ruler of the sound of thunder, and the brother of Cakulha. It is a noun in apposition.

Diagnosis. Charadra coyopa is superficially most similar to C. oligarchia , but with an oblong rather than a round orbicular, and with a prominent pale patch (absent in C. oligarchia ) below the orbicular. Th e male vesica has a single massive cornutus, unique in Charadra .

Description. Female unknown; forewing length 18.9 mm. Head, thorax and abdomen – as for C. franclemonti , differing in the following characters: prothoracic collar pale brown with a whitish-grey border; vestiture paler grey brown; forewings with basal two-thirds grey brown, distal third (beyond postmedial line) grey, terminal area grey brown; reniform spot yellowish white with oblong, hollow-centered medial line; orbicular elongate oval, yellowish white with diffuse brown central scales; postmedial line distinct and serrate at veins; subterminal line diffuse and brown, expanded to a thick black line at costal and anal margins, two apical black dashes along veins. Male genitalia (Fig. 24) – Valves simple, subquadrate apically with an incurved, scoop-shaped dorsocaudal apex, which appears irregular and somewhat spinulose; costal process absent; clasper a simple scoop-shaped process about 1/6 length of dorsal valve margin, with broad surface directed dorso-cephalad; sacculus unmodified; uncus strongly constricted medially and apex bifid, Y-shaped; tegumen expanded dorsally; saccus V-shaped; juxta triangular; subscaphium sclerotized and minutely scobinate; aedeagus 4.5 × longer than wide, with a very wide, dorsally directed opening to vesica, opening about 1/3 total length of aedeagus; vesica directed at about 90 degrees to aedeagus; a single, massive rose-thorn like cornutus positioned near base on left side, directed towards vesica base.

Distribution and biology. Known only from the holotype specimen from the

Mexico City area. Th e collection date indicates a flight period in January.

USNM

Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Lepidoptera

Family

Pantheidae

Genus

Charadra

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF