The Heliothinae of Iran (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae)
Author
Matov, Alexej
Author
Zahiri, Reza
Author
Holloway, Jeremy D.
text
Zootaxa
2008
1763
1
37
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.181966
1822bdf4-a38e-45f5-bf44-83bd611e100e
1175-5326
181966
Heliothis peltigera
([Denis & Schiffermüller], 1775)
Pl. 1, fig. 4; male genitalia Pl. 4, fig. 23; female genitalia Pl. 8, fig. 39.
Noctua peltigera
[Denis & Schiffermüller], 1775, Ank. Eines Syst. Werkes von den Schmett. Der Wienergegend: 89 (TL.: [
Austria
]: Vienna district).
Synonymy:
Phalaena
(
Bombyx
)
alphea
Cramer, 1780
;
Phalaena
(
Noctua
)
florentina
Esper
, [1788];
Phalaena
(
Noctua
)
charmione
Stoll, 1790
;
Phalaena (Noctua) scutigera
Borkhausen, 1792
;
Phalaena straminea
Donovan, 1793
;
Heliothis peltigera
f.
clarissima
Turati, 1924;
Chloridea peltigera
var.
insulata
Navas, 1924
.
References
: Bienert 1870 (
Heliothis Peltigera
); Christoph 1873 (
Heliothis Peltiger
); Schwingenschuss 1938 (
Chloridea peltigera
); Kalali 1976 (
Chloridea peltigera
); Modarres Awal 1994, 1997, 1999 (
Chloridea
(=
Heliothis
)
peltigera
), Hacker & Kautt 1999 (
Heliothis peltigera
); Hacker & Meineke 2001 (
Heliothis peltigera
); Gutleb & Wiesser 2001 (
Heliothis peltigera
); Hacker 2001 (
Heliothis peltigera
); Ebert & Hacker 2002 (
Heliothis peltigera
).
Bionomics:
Multivoltine, throughout the year, probably bivoltine with summer aestivation (Kravchenko
et al.
2005). Moths flying from January to December. Larvae are polyphagous, feed on 49 species of herbaceous plants, shrubs and trees of 13 botanical families, prefer
Asteraceae
,
Fabaceae
,
Malvaceae
,
Lamiaceae
and
Solanaceae
. The species is a well-known pest in fields and gardens but is less destructive than
Helicoverpa armigera
.
Heliothis peltigera
inhabits the Mediterranean evergreen sclerophyllous forest zone and various kinds of subtropical open lands, usually modifed by agriculture or gardens up to elevation
3300 m
. It is a wellknown migratory species in the Mediterranean Basin and Near and Middle East. Eastward, it extends to the Indian Subcontinent, the Himalaya region, Tibet and the mountain chains of the former West Turkistan, south to all Arabian Peninsula and East Africa (Hacker 2001).
Distribution
: Palaeosubtropic-Paleotropical. North and East Africa, Europe (in the north – migrant), Near East, Caucasus, Transcaucasia, Central Asia,
Kazakhstan
,
China
(including Tibet), north
India
,
Nepal
, South-
East Asia
. – In
Iran
(Pl. 10, fig. 52) occurs everywhere except eastern provinces.
Material examined
:
396 specimens
from provinces West
Azerbaijan
, East
Azerbaijan
, Ardebil, Guilan, Mazandaran, Golestan, Khorasan, Semnan, Tehran, Qom, Qazvin, Zanjan, Kordestan, Kermanshah, Lorestan, Esfahan, Charmahal va Bakhtiari, Kohkiluyeh va Boyer-Ahmad, Khuzestan,
Fars
, Yazd, Kerman, Bushehr, Hormozgan and Sistan va Baluchestan, collected between
1.I to 17.XII
on elevations from
0 to 3300 m
.