A review of Mexican Stamnodes (Lepidoptera: Geometridae) with the description of 16 new species
Author
Matson, Tanner A.
AD85C521-0781-451F-92F6-D32B08C21395
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Connecticut, Storrs, Connecticut 06269 – 3043, USA. National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington D. C., USA.
MatsonT@SI.edu
text
European Journal of Taxonomy
2023
2023-12-14
911
1
79
https://europeanjournaloftaxonomy.eu/index.php/ejt/article/download/2371/10397
journal article
10.5852/ejt.2023.911.2371
2118-9773
10376790
DB29E6F1-7925-46DB-8C9E-055C639203CE
Stamnodes agapetica
(
Dyar, 1916
)
Figs 39
,
60
,
94–95
Coenocalpe agapetica
Dyar, 1916: 32
.
Type
locality: Zacualpan [State of
Mexico
],
Mexico
. [USNM].
Stamnodes artemis
Rindge, 1958: 1–2
, figs 1–2, 13–14,
syn. nov.
Type
locality: Upper Camp Pinery
Canyon, Chiricahua Mountains, Cochise Co.,
Arizona
,
USA
. [LACM, AMNH].
Stamnodes artemis
–
Ferguson 1983: 103
(checklist). —
Furniss
et al
. 1988: 8
. —
Poole
& Gentili 1996: 686
(checklist). —
Scoble 1999: 901
(catalogue). —
Scoble & Hausmann 2007
(online catalogue) —
Pohl
et al.
2016: 448
(checklist). —
Rajaei
et al.
2022
(online catalogue).
Stamnodes agapetica
–
Scoble 1999: 901
(catalogue). —
Scoble & Hausmann 2007
(online catalogue). —
Rajaei
et al.
2022
(online catalogue).
Coenocalpe agapetica
–
Beutelspacher-Baigts 2013: 95
, 257.
Taxonomic act
Stamnodes artemis
is regarded as a new synonym of
S. agapetica
. Dyar’s original description of
S. agapetica
is weakly informative, but the types of
S. artemis
match in fine detail the
holotype
of
S. agapetica
. Genetic evidence further supports this new synonymy; a COI barcoded individual (BOLD Process ID: LNAUY473-19; GenBank OP898460) collected at
9000 ft
in
Hidalgo
shows only a subtle genetic barcode divergence (~ 1%) from Arizona’s
S. artemis
. Although neither the
holotype
nor topotypical specimens of
S. agapetica
have been sequenced, the sequenced specimen from
Hidalgo
appears to be representative –
Hidalgo
and the type locality of Zacualpan are quite close.
Rindge (1958)
was probably unaware of
S. agapetica
when he described
S. artemis
, as it was classified in
Coenocalpe
Hübner
and no prior work had consolidated the many
Stamnodes
species
that were at that time spread across a few disparate genera.
Diagnostic remarks
Stamnodes agapetica
is readily confused with
S. apollo
. It can be distinguished from
S. apollo
by its deep orange ground colour that lies in contrast to the lighter buff-orange colour of
S. apollo
and a forewing underside apex and hindwing underside that are maculated with red to brown scales that darken to form a medial transverse band on the hindwing underside; the same areas in
S. apollo
are cream to buff in colour with the hindwing underside showing subtle dark brown, transverse striations. Male genitalia offer the most diagnostic characters;
S. agapetica
has pointed lateral projections on the juxta (
Fig. 60a
) and only a single, large, spinose cornutus on the vesica (
Fig. 60b
), while
S. apollo
has a more rounded juxta lacking lateral projections (
Fig. 59a
) and a pair of large spinose cornuti on the vesica (
Fig. 59b
). It should be noted, the pointed lateral projections on the juxta in
S. agapetica
are not easily visualized in
Fig. 60a
.
Distribution
Mexico
: so far as known,
S. agapetica
is the only species found throughout the Sierra Madre Occidental, Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt, and Sierra Madre Oriental. Collections spanning this vast range are few, and gene flow is presumably maintained across the high elevation pine-fir forests that punctuate its mountainous habitat. The distribution of this species largely overlaps that of its sister,
S. apollo
, which may also have a similarly expansive, yet unconfirmed, Mexican distribution.
USA
:
Stamnodes agapetica
is only known from the Madrean sky islands of southeast
Arizona
in the
USA
.
Biology
Stamnodes agapetica
is spring and summer active, March through July, and appears to be more common in later months. The immature stages remain unknown.
Molecular characterization
This species is represented in BOLD as BIN: BOLD:AAJ5005 (n = 5). At present, the average pairwise intraspecific distance is 0.2% and the pairwise maximum intraspecific distance is 0.52%. The distance to the nearest adjacent interspecific neighbour,
Stamnodes apollo
(n = 3), is around 7% (
Fig. 94
).