Taxonomy of southern California Erebidae and Noctuidae (Lepidoptera) with descriptions of twenty one new species
Author
Mustelin, Tomas
text
Zootaxa
2006
1278
1
47
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.273509
899ffdc9-d0a8-4d5d-946e-a7cb59be3020
11755326
273509
Heteranassa fraterna
(
Smith, 1899
)
Heteranassa minor
Smith, 1899
,
NEW SYNONYM
Smith (1899)
described both
Campometra
(=
Heteranassa
)
fraterna
(Smith)
and
H. minor
(Smith)
based on material from southern California and Arizona. His descriptions are short and based exclusively on external appearance. Smith chose the name
H. fraterna
to indicate the similarity to
H. mima
(Harvey, 1876)
and the name
H. minor
to indicate its smaller size. The
types
are deposited in the USNM, and one specimen of each was designated as the
lectotype
by
Todd (1982)
. Both
lectotypes
are female and are very similar in maculation and size. Based on the absence of any differences in genital morphology between the two
lectotypes
and several cotypes, I propose that
H. minor
be synonymized with
H. fraterna
. Both were described in the same paper;
H. fraterna
appears first, and I select it as the senior name.
Heteranassa fraterna
is a relatively common species in the deserts of southern California. There is a great deal of variation in size, ground color, the amount of dark dusting on the forewing, and the presence of pale or white scales in the reniform spot. The
type
of
H. minor
is within the variation of the species. Females tend to be more or less uniformly blackish, as are the
lectotypes
of both
H. fraterna
and
H. minor
, while males have more contrasting markings. In his description of
H. fraterna
,
Smith (1899)
emphasized the narrow separation of the two black lines from the antemedial transverse line, which is much broader in
H. mima
. I have not examined the
types
of
mima
and therefore cannot determine whether
mima
is indeed distinct from
fraterna
.