Hesperiidae of Rondônia, Brazil: Taxonomic comments on “ night ” skippers, with descriptions of new genera and species (Lepidoptera: Eudaminae)
Author
Austin, George T.
McGuire Center for Lepidoptera and Biodiversity Florida Museum of Natural History, University of Florida P. O. Box 112710, Gainesville, Florida 32611
text
Insecta Mundi
2008
2008-03-03
2008
29
1
36
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.4532815
1942-1354
4532815
Nascus solon solon
(Plötz, 1882)
(
Fig. 64, 67
,
74-75
,
120-121
,
130
)
Rondonian males of
N. solon
(mean FW length = 29.0 mm [28.1-30.6, n = 10)] vary on the dorsum from olive to yellow-olive and in the width of the dark band on the ventral hindwing that may be partially separate from the dark brown margin or fully incorporated within it. Medial markings on that wing are absent or, usually, as vague dark macules in Sc+R
1
-Rs and occasionally in the discal cell. The pale macules in cells M
1
-M
2
and M
2
-M
3
on the forewing are variably present; the latter or both may be absent. The small macule in the upper part of cell CuA
2
-2A is also often absent. The single female seen from
Rondônia
(FW length =
36.1 mm
) has five subapical macules on the forewing as is apparently typical of this subspecies (
Evans 1952
). The dorsum of this female is virtually identical to that of the female of
N. broteas
from
Rondônia
except for the number of subapical macules (
N. broteas
has four). The forewing of
N. solon
is more pointed (less rounded). The venter is also similar to that of
N. broteas
, but the discal band is not completely separated from the dark margin as it is on
N. broteas
.
The genitalia of Rondonian males of
N. solon
(
Fig. 120
) are as illustrated for this species by Williams and
Bell (1934
, as
N. broteas
) and
Evans (1952)
. The genitalia of the single female from Rondônia (
Fig. 121
) have a quadrate lamella postvaginalis with a narrow and shallow V-shaped central indentation. The central portion of the lamella antevaginalis is short with a pair of broad and pointed lateral lobes. Both male and female genitalia are identical to those of
Nascus solon corilla
Evans, 1952
, from
Costa Rica
(pers. obs.).
Figure 117-120.
Male genitalia of
Pseudonascus
and
Nascus
(from BRAZIL: Rondônia). Structures shown are lateral, dorsal, and ventral views of tegumen, uncus, gnathos, and associated structures; lateral internal view of right valva; lateral view of aedeagus and associated structures; and ventral view of transtilla and juxta.
117)
P. paulliniae
(GTA #2460).
118)
N. phocus
(GTA #3534).
119)
N. broteas
(GTA #7211).
120)
N. salon salon
(GTA #1725).
Nascus solon
is common in central Rondônia, with records for May through August and October through December; most records are in the early wet season (
Fig. 130
). The species has been reported from southern
Mexico
south into the immediate Amazonian drainage of
Brazil
and
Peru
(
Hoffmann 1941
,
Evans 1952
, de la Maza and de la Maza 1985, Lamas 1994, Warren 2000, Luis et al. 2004).