Partial revision of the genus Robinsonia Grote 1866: description of five new species for the Neotropical fauna (Lepidoptera, Erebidae, Arctiinae, Phaegopterina)
Author
Laguerre, Michel
text
Zootaxa
2021
2021-06-18
4990
1
65
80
journal article
5368
10.11646/zootaxa.4990.1.4
fba570b2-6a41-4565-9b2a-903fee19af14
1175-5326
4982833
6D719655-D925-441F-947C-6F26CF8BEFB1
Note on
Robinsonia marginata
Rothschild, 1909
and
Robinsonia flavicorpus
Dognin, 1910
Beside
R. simulans
Laguerre
sp. nov.
, another very common species in French Guiana is indisputably
R
.
marginata
Rothschild, 1909
. Its habitus is similar to
R. simulans
except that the termen is bordered by a black denticulated narrow band. This species has been described from
two females
collected in
Guyana
. In the original description (
Rothschild 1909
), it is claimed that they were received from Rev. M. Whitford, who in turn had bought them in Georgetown but they were certainly collected by the miners at Omai (
Rothschild 1910 p.3
). This species is abundant in French Guiana, especially along the Kaw Road, but I have never found it outside this country. Beside this species one can find an enigmatic entity:
R. flavicorpus
Dognin, 1910
, described based on a single male coming from the French dealer E. Le Moult and collected in August at St. Jean du Maroni also in French Guiana. The male
type
is housed in Washington (USNM) and it has been illustrated along with its genitalia by Alan Watson in 1971 (plate 25e and genitalia 120c–d). The two species are very close and the habitus difference is very slight. Moreover
R
.
flavicorpus
seems especially scarce: the
type
is unique in Washington, in the NHMUK (ex British Museum) there is only a picture pinned in the corresponding drawer and no specimen is present in MNHN in Paris! I was lucky to collect a small series of
four males
in the Venezuelan Guiana, all coming from the same road: El Dorado—Sta. Elena, either at PK 13 (
5-VIII-1995
) or at PK 38 (
16–17-VIII-1996
), so at a close distance of the southern
Guyana
border. Three are in my collection and one is in the Jean Aimé Cerda collection in Patawa (French Guiana). It is interesting to note that its absence in MNHN implies that nobody has collected this species in French Guiana during the years between 1980 and the beginning of the
XXIst
century. Dissection of one of these males shows that these specimens are referable to
R. flavicorpus
as illustrated by Watson.
FIGURE 18.
Upper side on the left and ventral view on the right,
A
and
B
, male of
R. marginata
—
C
and
D
, female of
R. marginata
—
E
and
F
male of
R. flavicorpus
.
A–D
, from French Guiana;
E–F
, from Venezuela. Scale = 10 mm.
At the habitus level there are some minor differences: for
R. marginata
the forewing apex is pointed and the termen is concave whereas the apex is rounded and the termen is straight in
R. flavicorpus
. In
R. flavicorpus
the coastal dark brown line displays a tooth inward after cell, this indentation being absent in
marginata
. The dark brown border along termen is more denticulated in
R. flavicorpus
and there are a few brown stains on disk and at the lowest part of the cell extremity (see
Fig. 18
, present in the
four males
).
Male genitalia show some clear differences: the valvae are longer in
R. flavicorpus
and narrower near extremity (not spatulate as in
marginata
), the translucent lobe of the valva is rounder and shorter in
R. marginata
, in
R. flavicorpus
the junction between vinculum and saccus is clearly narrowed, the two vesica are different (see
Fig. 19
).
FIGURE 19. A–E
: male genitalia of
R. marginata
,
A
ventral view,
B
dorsal view,
C
lateral view,
D
valva view from inside,
E
aedeagus with everted vesica.
F–J
: male genitalia of
R. flavicorpus
,
F
ventral view,
G
dorsal view,
H
lateral view,
I
valva view from inside,
J
aedeagus with everted vesica.
Finally, even if the specimens were old, we got a small fragment of the barcode (289 bp) which shows already a 2.8% difference with the dozen or so of
R. marginata
sequenced from
French Guiana
(see tree in
Fig. 3
). So it is now clear that
R. marginata
and
R. flavicorpus
, despite very similar habitus, are distinct species but, up to now, no specimen of
R. flavicorpus
has been collected in
French Guiana
since its original description as opposed to
R. marginata
which proved to be a very common species throughout the territory.