Revision of the New World Panthea Hübner (Lepidoptera, Noctuidae) with descriptions of 5 new species and 2 new subspecies
Author
Anweiler, Gary G.
87B63195-32B4-4FAF-8732-54242BF1FAA9
E. H. Strickland Entomological Museum, 218 Earth Sciences Building, Department of Biological Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, T 6 G 2 E 9
gganweiler@shaw.ca)
text
ZooKeys
2009
2009-05-12
9
9
97
134
journal article
10.3897/zookeys.9.157
f309b9a6-ba6b-4f63-96b6-caf37e4e2a21
1313–2970
576456
20B00870-7416-4583-ADE0-4302E5571B66
Panthea
greyi
Anweiler
,
sp. n.
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:
0225DA43-EDA5-458B-AE4D-64188BAB8944
Figs.
25-27
,
57
,
68
,
71
Type material.
Holotype
male –
UNITED STATES
“AZ [
Arizona
]
Cochise Co.
[
County
]
7700 ft
/ Chiricahua Mtns [Mountains], Onion / Saddle MV lights /
4 Aug 2000
J.B. Walsh
leg.”; “
HOLOTYPE
/
Panthea greyi
/ Anweiler” [red label]; [
31° 56.006' N
109° 15.804' W
].
Deposited
in
CNC
.
Paratypes
(32 ♁,
4 ♀
):
UNITED STATES
.
Arizona
:
Cochise County
: same data as holotype (1 ♁)
;
Chiricahua Mtns
,
Pinery Canyon
,
Upper Camp
,
5.vii.1956
, 1 ♁,
1 ♀
);
same locality and coll.,
6.vii.1956
(1 ♁)
;
same locality,
7.vii.1956
,
Lloyd Martin
,
John
A.
Comstock
and
Will. A. Rees
, coll. (2 ♁)
;
Chiricahua Mtns
,
Pinery Canyon
, 6800',
26.vii.1965
,
RH Leuschner
, coll. (2 ♁)
;
same locality and coll.,
26.vi.1992
(1 ♁)
;
Pinery Canyon
cmpgd,
31.93° N
109.27° W
, 6500' 5.viii.08
C. Schmidt
and
B. Walsh
(3 ♁).
Apache Co.
,
White Mountains
,
Greer
, 8300',
1-3.vii.1993
,
R. Leuschner
, coll. (2 ♁)
;
same locality and coll.,
24-25.vii.1965
(2 ♁)
;
same locality and coll., 8200',
6.vi.1990
(1 ♁)
;
Greer
,
28-30.vii.2005
,
James Adams
and
Doug Yanega
, coll. (1 ♁)
;
Junction Hwy.
260-373,
2.vii.1986
,
Pat Savage
, coll. (1 ♁).
Graham Co.
:
Pinaleno Mtns
,
Mt. Graham
,
Pine Crest
, 7300',
28.vi.1955
,
Lloyd Martin
,
John A. Comstock
and
Will. A. Rees
, coll. (1 ♁).
Coconino Co.
:
Oak Creek
Canyon, 5000',
6.viii.1986
, RH.
Leuschner
, coll. (1 ♁)
;
same locality and coll.,
7.viii.1986
(1 ♁)
;
same locality and coll., 5500',
23.vii.1989
(1 ♁).
Gila Co.
:
Mogollon Rim
,
Tonto Creek State Fish Hatchery
, 6400', 21.vi.957,
Lloyd M. Martin
,
Robert J. Ford
and
William A. Rees
, coll. (1 ♁).
New Mexico
:
Colfax Co.
:
Sangre de Cristo Mts.
,
Cimarron Canyon
, 7900',
7.vii.1962
,
E. and I. Munroe
, coll. (1 ♁,
1 ♀
)
;
same locality and coll.,
10.vii.1962
(1 ♁).
Otero Co.
:
3 mi
sw
Cloudcroft
, 8830',
23.v.2006
,
Greg Forbes
, coll. (
1 ♀
)
;
Sacramento Mtns
,
Dry Canyon Rd.
, 2.1 mi. n.
Rte
82, 6 mi.
east Rt.
244 at
Cloudcroft., G.
Forbes
, coll. (1 ♁).
Lincoln Co.
:
Ruidosa
,
Cedar Creek
campground, 7000',
28.vii.1962
,
E. and I. Munroe
, coll. (
1 ♀
).
Grant Co.
:
Gila National Forest
at
Emory Pass
,
32°52.5'N
107°45.0'W
, 7160',
5.viii.1991
,
E. Metzler
, coll. (1 ♁).
Colorado
:
Larimer Co.
:
Big Thompson Canyon
, 6500',
9.vii.1955
,
R.H. Leuschner
, coll. (1 ♁).
Archuleta Co.
:
Pagosa Springs
, 7000',
7.vii.1988
,
R.H. Leuschner
, coll. (1 ♁).
Teller Co.
:
Florrisant
,
Big Springs Ranch
,
14.viii.1960
, TC.
Emmel
, coll. (1 ♁)
;
same locality and coll.,
12.viii.1960
(1 ♁). Boul- der
Co.
:
Left Hand Canyon
, 6000', 22.vii.958, RH.
Leuschner
, coll. (2 ♁)
.
Etymology
.
I take pleasure in naming this species in honor of the late L. Paul Grey, who encouraged my budding interest in noctuid moths and who sent me the first specimen of this new
Panthea
.
Diagnosis
.
Panthea greyi
belongs to the
P
.
furcilla
species-group, and can be separated from all
Panthea
with the exception of
P. furcilla
by the characters listed in the diagnosis for the group, namely the elongate vesica with one terminal spine in the male and the two-chambered corpus bursae in the female. It can be separated from
P
.
furcilla
by range, with
P
.
greyi
occurring in southwestern
United States
west of the Great Plains and
P
.
furcilla
east of the Great Plains in eastern
United States
and north of the Great Plains in
Canada
. Externally,
P
.
greyi
is most similar to
Panthea virginarius
and
Panthea acronytoides nigra
.
P
.
virginarius
occurs west and north of the range of
P
.
greyi
.
Panthea acronyctoides nigra
may occur with
P
.
greyi
in northern Colorado where
P
.
greyi
can be recognized by the light, banded hindwing and
P
.
acronyctoides
by the dark hindwing, as well as by the genitalic characters.
Panthea gigantea
is a larger species with two cornuti in the male vesica and a single chambered, thin-walled corpus bursae in the female.
Description
.
Sexes similar and overlapping in size, female only slightly darker than male; male forewing length 19-22.5 mm, female
21-25 mm
.
Head
– Male antenna bipectinate, with pectinations about 2 × as long as width of antennal shaft; female antenna simple; palps reduced, both palps and lower part of frons clothed in dark redbrown or black hairs; remainder of head a mixture of light-gray, dark-brown and black hair-like scales.
Thorax
– collar, thorax and tegulae a mixture of light gray, dark brown and black hair-like scales; tegulae crossed by two oblique dark bands midway and along outer edge; legs clothed in dense long light gray and dark gray hair, tarsus banded black and white.
Dorsal forewing
– ground a mix of white or very light gray and dark brownish-black scales, appearing powdery gray; crossed by five black lines; basal line marked by one or two small patches of black scales; antemedial line straight or nearly so, bending distad in fold before continuing to wing margin; medial line most prominent, straight except for bending distad slightly in fold before reaching lower margin; postmedial line narrower, erratic, bent distad at each vein and angling basad below vein CUA1, contacting or closely approaching medial line below veins CuA2 before bending distad to lower margin of wing; subterminal line incomplete, often reduced to a few dark patches of scales near upper margin, erratic, defined by white scales along distal side; fringe dark gray black, checkered with a few white scales at veins; small black bar or crescent marking the end of the cell.
Abdomen
– clothed in short, stiff dark gray-brown hair, paler at joints.
Dorsal hindwing
– white with long gray hair-like scales along inner margin, crossed by poorly defined light gray antemedial, medial and postmedial bands and with a narrow dark gray terminal line; fringe checkered with dark gray and white; veins narrowly lined with dark scales.
Male genitalia
– (
Fig. 57
) valve simple, elongate, cucullus rounded, clasper a simple prominent blade near apex, about as long as width of valve; tegumen with large triangular earlike subuncal lobes; uncus laterally compressed with crown approximately as high as wide; ending in a rounded terminus resembling a duck’s beak viewed from above; inflated and everted vesica long, narrow, about 3-4 × as long as wide, angled to left midway and armed with a single massive slightly bent or curved terminal cornutus, oriented toward head; ductus seminalis exiting midway at right angle to right.
Female genitalia
– (
Fig. 68
) papillae anales a pair of soft curved bands with sparse hairs; posterior and anterior apophyses about equal in size and of average length; sterigma well-developed, average in size and amount of sclerotization; ductus bursae wide, about 2 × as long as wide, mostly heavily sclerotized with deep creases and folds, expanding gradually into posterior section of corpus bursae; corpus bursae slightly constricted midway, forming a thick-walled and partially sclerotized posterior section united with lower half of ductus, and a thin-walled, translucent globular anterior section.
Distribution
and biology.
Panthea greyi
has been collected in the mountains of
Arizona
,
New Mexico
,
Colorado
and southern
Utah
, at elevations of
1524-2545 m
(
Fig. 71
). Collection dates range from June 6 through September 23. It has been collected in
Arizona
in oak-pine woodland.