Fossil butterflies, calibration points and the molecular clock (Lepidoptera: Papilionoidea)
Author
Jong, Rienk De
text
Zootaxa
2017
4270
1
1
63
journal article
32975
10.5281/zenodo.583183
6c479acc-8b18-4f0b-a6e5-85bcd6d7b6b7
1175-5326
583183
2D00AFF5-4FE2-4EC1-A328-C8670CFB8D6D
vetula
.
Vanessa vetula
von
Heyden, 1859
Incertae sedis.
Germany
,
Rheinland-Pfalz
, Siebengebirge, Rott; Chattian, late Oligocene.
Depository: BMNH (holotype, but not found).
Published figures: von
Heyden (1859: Pl. 1 Fig. 10)
; Scudder (1875: Pl. III
Figs 12
, 16, as
Thanatites juvenalis
).
The original description and figure of this specimen was reproduced by Scudder (1875), who corrected previous mistakes and compared the fossil to the hesperiid
Thanaos juvenalis
(Fabricius)
(Pyrginae; now in
Erynnis
). Because of supposed similarities, Scudder (1875) erected the genus
Thanatites
for the fossil. There is, however, very little to support this opinion. As remarked by Scudder (1875: 65), the fossil "…is excessively obscure at the present time, and no fossil object I have ever studied has proved so difficult to decipher as this." The venation is too obscure to be helpful. The only character that could point to
Hesperiidae
is the presence of a costal fold, an apomorphy of part of the
Hesperiidae
. However, it is not mentioned in the original description, and only casually so by Scudder. Moreover, it is not shown in the figure. Scudder's assumption that the nearest living allies occur in tropical America is pure speculation, especially since it is not even certain that the fossil belongs to the
Hesperiidae
. There are no indications either, that the fossil belongs to the
Nymphalidae
, as supposed by von
Heyden (1859)
.
Kirby (1871)
placed it in the recent genus
Araschnia
, apparently following von Heyden who compared it to
Vanessa levana
Linnaeus
, now in
Araschnia
). Unless the specimen can be found and studied in greater detail, it is inconsequential for understanding either the timing or relationships of butterflies.
Kozlov (1988)
listed the fossil as “
Thanaites vetulinus
(Heyden)”.