A review of Mexican Stamnodes (Lepidoptera: Geometridae) with the description of 16 new species
Author
Matson, Tanner A.
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 albiapicata
Grossbeck, 1910
Figs 40
,
90
,
94–95
Stamnodes albiapicata
Grossbeck, 1910: 202
.
Type
locality: Redington,
Arizona
,
USA
. [USNM].
Stamnodes albiapicata
–
Grossbeck 1912: 283
. —
Swett 1915: 155
, 156.—
McDunnough 1938: 151
(checklist). —
McFarland 1965: 62
. —
Ferguson 1983: 103
(checklist). —
Furniss
et al
. 1988: 7
. —
Poole
& Gentili 1996: 686
(checklist). —
Scoble 1999: 901
(catalogue). —
Brown & Bash 2000: 73
. —
Brown 2004: 110
. —
Powell 2005: 369
. —
Scoble & Hausmann 2007
(online catalogue). —
Powell & Opler 2009: 226
, pl. 32 figs 22–23. —
Lee 2014
: e86 (inventory). —
Pohl
et al.
2016: 448
(checklist). —
Rajaei
et al
. 2022
(online catalogue).
Diagnostic remarks
In the
USA
, this taxon may be difficult to distinguish from closely related congeners, especially at the northern end of its range in
California
. In Mexico, however, this species cannot be confused with other members of the genus.
Distribution
Mexico
:
Stamnodes albiapicata
is found in the chaparral associations, canyons, and Pacific coastal scrub communities of
Baja California
. Records extend well into the
Baja California
Desert as far south as El Rosario. So far as known, no moths have been taken from
Sonora
, though it is recorded a short distance away in Pima Co.,
Arizona
(
USA
).
USA
:
Stamnodes albiapicata
ranges from Southern
California
to just south of the Bay Area, and east to central
Arizona
.
Biology
There is a single winter flight from December through February with a few individuals persisting into March. Larvae directly follow the adult flight and are found on new foliage in the spring.
McFarland (1965)
lists various hydrophylloid
Boraginaceae
as the hosts of this species, including
Phacelia
Juss.
,
Pholistoma
Lilja
, and
Nemophila
Nutt. David L. Wagner
and I have collected larvae (
Fig. 90
) from both
Phacelia
and
Pholistoma
in
California
.Additional unpublished life history details and larval illustrations are forthcoming (Matson & Wagner in prep.).
Molecular characterization
This species is represented in BOLD as BIN: BOLD: AAF2594 (n = 29). At present, the average pairwise intraspecific distance is 0.44% and the pairwise maximum intraspecific distance is 1.44%.