Tarmia greeneyi Warren, Medeiros, Dolibaina & Mielke, 2019

Medeiros, Adalberto Dantas De, Warren, Andrew D., Dolibaina, Diego Rodrigo, Carneiro, Eduardo, Mielke, Olaf Hermann Hendrik & Casagrande, Mirna Martins, 2019, Taxonomic revision of the genus Tarmia Lindsey, 1925 stat. rev. (Hesperiidae: Hesperiinae: Hesperiini: Moncina) with the description of a new species from the Andes, Zootaxa 4674 (2), pp. 215-224 : 217-222

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4674.2.3

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:BA154C90-D922-447F-B288-65895B0A99D2

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D58797-2A1F-FFAE-FF0D-FBACD73959B4

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Tarmia greeneyi Warren, Medeiros, Dolibaina & Mielke
status

sp. nov.

Tarmia greeneyi Warren, Medeiros, Dolibaina & Mielke sp. nov.

( Figs 2 View FIGURES 1–2 , 7–10 View FIGURES 3–10 , 12, 14 View FIGURES 11–14 , 16 View FIGURES 15–16 , 18 View FIGURES 17–18 , 19 View FIGURE 19 , 20 View FIGURE 20 )

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:F7C62051-609D-47B6-B7F4-8A3D753D4D46

Diagnosis. Tarmia greeneyi sp. nov. can be easily distinguished from T. monastica by the iridescent blue frons ( Fig. 2 View FIGURES 1–2 ). Additionally, other characters are unique to this species, including the ventral wing surfaces, with a row of violet submarginal spots ( Figs 8, 10 View FIGURES 3–10 ); valva distally narrow and slightly projected upward ( Fig. 16e View FIGURES 15–16 ); and lamella postvaginalis without lateral flaps ( Fig. 18b View FIGURES 17–18 ).

Description. Male ( Figs 7–8 View FIGURES 3–10 ) and female ( Figs 9–10 View FIGURES 3–10 ): forewing length 17–18 mm.

HEAD: dorsally dark brown, with yellow, elongate scales behind eyes and at transfrontal and frontoclypeal sutures; frons iridescent blue; gena pale yellow. Antenna about 2/3 length of costa, dorsally black, ventrally yellowish at base of the shaft segments, under apiculus, and base of club; nudum black, with 12 segments in male, 11–12 in female, restricted to apiculus. Labial palpi mixed with brown and yellow scales; second segment quadrate; third segment short, thin and conical.

THORAX: dorsally brown, ventrally pale brown mixed with long, rufous to yellow scales. Legs dark brown dorsad, with some yellowish to rufous brown scales ventrad; foretibia with epiphysis; midtibia spined, with a single pair of spurs; hind tibia spined, with two pairs of spurs.

DFW ( Figs 7, 9 View FIGURES 3–10 ): ground color dark brown, with sparse ochreous scales, denser at apex and along marginal area; a black sagittate brand near base of CuA 1 –CuA 2, proximal half longer than wide; three faint yellow spots represented by a single or few scales (absent in one female and four male paratypes), as follows: two apical, in the middle of R 3 –R 4, R 4 –R 5, in a line directed toward mid outer margin; one discal, at the end of the proximal half of M 3 –CuA 1; marginal line black; fringe greyish brown.

DHW ( Figs 7, 9 View FIGURES 3–10 ): ground color dark brown, unmarked; marginal line and fringe as on DFW.

VFW ( Figs 8, 10 View FIGURES 3–10 ): ground color dark brown, somewhat paler under CuA 2, with sparse rufous scales along costa, densely concentrated along veins at apex; three purple, opaque spots as follows: two subapical (the largest) at the middle of R 3 –R 4 and R 4 –R 5, in a line toward mid outer margin; another discal (the smallest) in M 3 –CuA 1 (some specimens have an additional spot in CuA 1 –CuA 2); eight bluish to purple submarginal spots between R 4 –2A, rectangular in R 4 –R 5 and R 5 –M 1, triangular between M 1 –2A, smaller and paler in CuA 2 –2A; internally to the submarginal spots, between R 4 –CuA 1, with five rectangular dark shadows; and distally to the submarginal spots, from R 4 to the tornus, a dark brown submarginal band, distally bordered by an ochreous thin marginal line; fringe as on DFW.

VHW ( Figs 8, 10 View FIGURES 3–10 ): ground color dark brown, somewhat paler in 2A–3A, with sparse ochreous scales, denser towards submarginal area; discal cell of female with very small purple spot at distal end, sometimes represented by a few scales (this spot present in 3 male paratypes as a single scale); five purple, quadrate to rectangular spots in a curved postdiscal band, between Sc+R 1 –2A, larger in Rs–M 1, smaller in M 1 –M 2; distally to all postdiscal spots, there are conspicuous dark spots, more developed in Rs–M 1, reduced in M 1 –M 2, faint in M 1 –M 2; seven submarginal, triangular, purple spots between Rs–2A, the posterior spot in CuA 1 –2A pale yellow; submarginal band, marginal line and fringes as on VFW.

ABDOMEN: dorsally dark brown, ventrally yellow, with a central dark brown stripe.

Male genitalia ( Fig. 16 View FIGURES 15–16 ): tegumen rectangular, with a long and relatively wide distal projection ( Fig. 16a View FIGURES 15–16 ). Saccus as long as tegumen+uncus, proximally narrowed ( Fig. 16b View FIGURES 15–16 ). Uncus tapered, shallowly bifid, triangular in lateral view ( Figs 16a, c View FIGURES 15–16 ). Gnathos as long as tegumen, arms arched in ventral view ( Fig. 16d View FIGURES 15–16 ). Valva long and narrow; sacculus triangular; costa narrow, fused with ampulla; ampulla concave; harpe distally narrow, forming with ampulla a projection with nearly dorsad orientation ( Fig. 16e View FIGURES 15–16 ). Aedeagus longer than valva, narrow and twisted in the middle ( Figs 16 View FIGURES 15–16 f–i); proximal end left curved; distal end with a projection on right side; cornuti as several small, thin spine-like structures, broadly dispersed on vesica ( Fig. 16g View FIGURES 15–16 ). Fultura inferior dorsally disjointed, with a thin and short ventral projection ( Fig. 16j View FIGURES 15–16 ).

Female genitalia ( Fig. 18 View FIGURES 17–18 ): tergum VIII triangular, with small, complete spiracular opening at its dorsal margin ( Fig. 18a View FIGURES 17–18 ). Sterigma broad, with a pair of corrugated lateral plates at its proximal margin; lamella antevaginalis short; lamella postvaginalis without lateral flaps (present in T. monastica ), distally bifid and densely covered with setae. Ostium at central portion of sterigma. Bursa copulatrix long and narrow; ductus bursae folded and slightly sclerotized with two lateral lines of signa; corpus bursae rounded ( Fig. 18b View FIGURES 17–18 ). Papilla analis wider than long ( Fig. 18a View FIGURES 17–18 ).

Distribution and Phenology. Tarmia greeneyi sp. nov. is known from a few specimens taken at approximately 1300 m in Peru (San Martin) and 1275 m in Ecuador (Napo) ( Fig. 20 View FIGURE 20 ). Material in the MGCL collected by Lafebre is known to include some specimens with questionable locality or elevational data, so the occurrence of T. greeneyi sp. n. as low as 500 m, as indicated on the specimen label, remains to be confirmed, as does its occurrence in El Oro or Tungurahua provinces. Additionally, a single male specimen was photographed by Gottfried Siebel in Bolivia, near Caranavi (15º59’4.703” S 67º36’54.926” W) ( Fig. 19 View FIGURE 19 ). There are records of T. greeneyi sp. nov. from April, August, October and December.

Etymology. This species is named after our friend Harold F. Greeney, an extraordinary Lepidopterist, who has discovered several new species of Hesperiidae , and has revealed the life history secrets of many butterfly taxa for the first time.

Type material. Holotype male deposited at the DZUP with the following labels: / HOLOTYPUS / Peru, San Martin, Rioja, El Afluente , VIII.2016, 5°39’48” S, 77°41’41” W 1320m, J. Pintado leg. / OM 81.351 GoogleMaps / Holotypus Tarmia greeneyi Warren, Medeiros, Dolibaina & Mielke det. /.

Allotype female deposited at the DZUP with the following labels: / ALLOTYPUS / Peru, San Martin, Rioja, El Afluente , VIII.2016 5°39’48” S, 77°41’41” W 1320m, J. Pintado leg. / OM 81.551 GoogleMaps / Allotypus Tarmia greeneyi Warren, Medeiros, Dolibaina & Mielke det. /.

Paratypes (8 males and 7 females): no collecting data, 1 female, OM 14.843 ( OM). ECUADOR— El Oro: (Bellavista), 550 m, 1 male, V.1971, R. de Lafebre leg., ( MGCL). Napo: (Narupa–Loreto Rd., km 13), 1275 m, 1 female, 24.VIII.2000, Harold Greeneyi leg., ( ADW). Tungurahua: Banos , Rio Topo , 1 male, X.1964, R. de Lafebre leg., ( MGCL). PERU— San Martin: Rioja ( El Afluente , 5°39’48” S, 77°41’41” W), 1300 m, 3 females, IV.2017, J. Pintado leg., OM 83.613 , OM 86.078 , ( OM (2), MUSM (1)), 1320 m, 6 males, 2 females, VIII.2016, J. Pintado leg. OM 81.109 , OM 81.331 , OM 81.771 , OM 81.491 , OM 81.341 , OM 81.511 , OM 81.541 ( OM (6), MUSM (1)) GoogleMaps .

OM

Otago Museum

ADW

University of Adelaide

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Lepidoptera

Family

Hesperiidae

SubFamily

Hesperiinae

Genus

Tarmia

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