Integrative revision of the Iberian species of Coscinia Hübner, [1819] sensu lato and Spiris Hübner, [1819], (Lepidoptera: Erebidae, Arctiinae)
Author
Macià, Ramon
Author
Mally, Richard
Author
Ylla, Josep
Author
Gastón, Javier
Author
Huertas, Manuel
text
Zootaxa
2019
2019-06-14
4615
3
401
449
journal article
26487
10.11646/zootaxa.4615.3.1
72c56097-337c-42fa-90ee-2da90529b2d2
1175-5326
3246048
4D816AA2-2AEA-470F-A79D-45452CFAE9F2
Coscinia mariarosae
Expósito, 1991
Original combination:
Coscinia mariarosae
Expósito, 1991
.
SHILAP Revista de lepidopterología
,
19
(73), 31–34.
LT. Serra d´Alfàbia, Mallorca,
Balearic Islands
(
Spain
).
Material studied.
1♂
Coll de Reis
,
Nus
de sa
Corbata
,
Escorca
(
Mallorca
),
674 m
, 31SDE83,
7.X.2015
,
R. Macià
leg.
;
1♀
Coll de Reis
,
Nus
de sa
Corbata
,
Escorca
(
Mallorca
),
674 m
, 31SDE83,
3.X.2016
,
R. Macià
leg.
;
1♂
Puig de s´Aritjar
,
Serra d´Alfabia
,
Bunyola
(
Mallorca
),
1025 m
, 31SDD79,
3.X.2015
,
R. Macià
leg.
;
1♀
Puig de s´Aritjar
,
Serra d´Alfabia
,
Bunyola
(
Mallorca
),
1025 m
, 31SDD79,
1.X.2016
,
R. Macià
leg.
;
1♂
Ctra. Ma
10
Km.
42, 5, For- nalutx (
Mallorca
),
524 m
, 31SDE70,
5.X.2016
,
R. Macià
leg.
FIGURE 34.
C. mariarosae
, male and female genitalia, gen. prep. 5730JG m. Coll de Reis, Nus de sa Corbata, Mallorca, Balears, (
Spain
), 5713JG f. Coll de Reis, Nus de sa Corbata, Mallorca, Balears, (
Spain
).
Diagnosis.
Coscinia mariarosae
is characterized by the silver-brown grey forewings, subbasal and antemedial lines strongly angled; hindwings uniformly brown grey. It has a certain resemblance to
L. bifasciata
, but it is darker in colour.
Description. Imago (
Figs 11–12
).
Average wingspan
36 mm
(n = 15;
26–48 mm
).
Genitalia (
Fig. 34
).
The male genitalia are characterised by a group of well-developed cornuti that surround the sclerotized plaque which is present in all the other species of the genus. This plate is elongate and narrow in
C. mariarosae
and it is triangular and wider in the other
Coscinia
species. In the female genitalia, the sclerotized wide plate that surrounds the bursa constricts it asymmetrically, close to one end; the process from which the ductus seminalis emerges is very thick and sclerotized, another clear difference from the other species of the genus.
Immature stages (
Fig. 48
).
The last instar larva measures
21–24 mm
. Head capsule dark brown. Dorsal area very dark, extending to verruca SD1, with a white narrow central line; laterally, from SD1 to the prolegs, light yellow with dark spots; ventral surface light yellow to whitish, with blotchy greyish spots medially; verruca D1, D2, SD1 black; L1, L2, L3 yellowish; thoracic legs with the femur and the tibia straw-coloured, the tarsus and the nails dark; abdominal prolegs with 21 to 26 large nails. Pupae of both male and female erect, dark brown, the tips of the antennae not touching; those of the pterothecae touch along a straight line.
Molecular data.
The three genetically investigated specimens differ by 0–0.43% from each other, with an average of 0.29% p-distance. Interspecific p-distances in specimens of
Coscinia
range from 6.91% to 9.50%, and both highest and lowest p-distances are with specimens of
C. cribraria
(
Table 3
).
In the wingless gene, the three
C. mariarosae
specimens differ by 0–0.30% from each other, and by 1.19–1.79% from both
C. cribraria
and
C. chrysocephala
.
The monophyly of
C. mariarosae
is strongly supported (1.00 PP, 100% BS). In the strongly (1.00 PP) too moderately (82% BS) supported
Coscinia
monophylum, it is sister to the clade comprising
C. cribraria
and
C. chrysocephala
(
Fig. 62
).
Biology.
The biology of this species is still poorly known. The first observations suggested a univoltine cycle with a single generation from mid-September to October (
Macià
et al.
2016
). Recent observations indicate that it is at least bivoltine with a first generation from May to early June and a second from mid-September to early October. Both sexes are nocturnal and are attracted by artificial light. The species prefers calcareous, stony and sunny terrain at altitudes between
400–1200 m
where a typical calcicole vegetation flourishes, rich in rosemary (
Rosmarinus officinalis
). It is possible that this is one of the food plants, as well as
Plantago
,
Taraxacum
and other low plants and grasses (
Macià
et al.
2015
,
2016
).
Distribution (
Fig. 56
).
Endemic to the island of Mallorca where is restricted to the Serra de Tramontana.