Speyeria hesperis (Edwards, 1864)

Dunford, James C., 2009, Taxonomic overview of the greater fritillary genus Speyeria Scudder and the atlantis - hesperis species complexes, with species accounts, type images, and relevant literature (Lepidoptera: Nymphalidae), Insecta Mundi 2009 (90), pp. 1-74 : 29-30

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.5352660

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03FC87C6-7B2C-FFB2-FF6C-F9D5FE40DE0D

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Speyeria hesperis (Edwards, 1864)
status

 

Speyeria hesperis (Edwards, 1864) View in CoL

( Figure 4C View Figure 4 , 25-46 View Figure 21-25 View Figure 26-30 View Figure 31-35 View Figure 36-40 View Figure 41-45 View Figure 46-48 )

Argynnis Hesperis Edwards, 1864a: 502 View in CoL .

Speyeria atlantis hesperis (Edwards) View in CoL [ dos Passos and Grey 1945a].

Speyeria hesperis (Edwards) [ Scott et al. 1998].

Common names. Hesperis fritillary, western fritillary.

Type deposited. Neotype (male) designated by Brown (1965; see also dos Passos and Grey 1965) at Carnegie Museum of Natural History ( Figure 25 View Figure 21-25 ).

Type locality. Defined by dos Passos and Grey (1947) based on lectotype (= neotype from Brown 1965; see also dos Passos and Grey 1965) as Turkey Creek Junction, Jefferson County, Colorado.

Type label data. “ Hesperis [male] type Colo; Neotype, Argynnis hesperis [male], W. H. Edwards designated by dos Passos and Grey 1965 ” .

Identification, taxonomy, and variation. Formerly considered a subspecies of S. atlantis , S. hesperis is variable throughout its range and 21 subspecific taxa are currently recognized. Speyeria hesperis and S. atlantis occur together or in close proximity, especially in cool, forested habitats, in many areas of western North America. Dos Passos and Grey (1965) noted that S. hesperis represented an unsilvered subspecies of S. atlantis along the Front Range in Colorado. Tebaldi (1982) (also see Ferris 1983) used starch gel electrophoresis of six enzymes to analyze the relationships among three phenotypes of S. atlantis and found that the phenotypes could be considered “semispecies.” Scott et al. (1998) divided S. atlantis into a distinct species based on wing coloration and wing pattern, hesperis having mostly unsilvered or cream colored ventral hindwing spots and S. atlantis always silvered. However, this situation still needs to be addressed in greater detail. The original description for S. hesperis identifies it as having opaque/ cream colored spots (also see Figure 25 View Figure 21-25 ). Several ‘ hesperis ’ subspecies (i.e., S. h. electa , S. h. ratonensis, S. h. schellbachi, S. h. dorothea, S. h. nausicaa, S. h. capitanensis) are apparently always silvered. It may be that S. electa is a valid species and represents the silver-spotted western ‘species’ in the atlantis species complex (Cliff Ferris, pers. comm.). Adult wingspan ranges from 50-68 mm. The ventral hindwing disc is red-brown to orange-brown and can be silvered or unsilvered. Scott et. al. (1998) split S. atlantis and S. hesperis forms based on wing pattern and coloration and a few larval characters. Adult eye coloration in living individuals is blue-gray in some populations, and this may help separate some populations from similar S. aphrodite populations, which bear dull, yellow-green eyes ( Glassberg 2000). Larvae are generally solid black and bear orange spines with black tips. There are two brown lines located dorsomedially. The pupa is similar to S. atlantis in shape, but stouter; the color is brown on the head and wing cases. The abdomen is brown with some areas yellow-brown. Larval and pupal coloration varies throughout the range of S. hesperis (see Scott et al. 1998) due to various local climatic conditions.

Range. Speyeria hesperis occurs from Alaska, central Yukon and southwestern Northwest Territory, south through Canada east to western Manitoba, and in the western United States along the Rocky Mountains, to central California, northeastern and central Arizona, and central New Mexico.

Life history. Speyeria hesperis forms occur in moist meadows, gulches, and along cool slopes ( Scott 1986b). Scott (2006b) observed females laying eggs on pine needles, Quercus leaves, grasses, and various other plants near Viola spp. Edwards (1888c) described the morphology of the egg, larval instars, and pupal stage and provided the phenology of each stage. Flight period is from early June to late October.

Larval host plants. Viola canadensis var. scopulorum , V. adunca , V. sororia affinis , V. rydbergii , V. adunca bellidifolia , V. nuttallii , V. purpurea ( Scott 1992, 2006b; Scott et al. 1998).

Adult food resources. Yellow composites, mints ( Opler and Wright 1999); especially Monarda (Cliff Ferris, pers. comm.).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Lepidoptera

Family

Nymphalidae

Genus

Speyeria

Loc

Speyeria hesperis (Edwards, 1864)

Dunford, James C. 2009
2009
Loc

Argynnis Hesperis Edwards, 1864a: 502

Edwards, W. H. 1864: 502
1864
Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF