A new species of Lithophane Hbn. (Lepidoptera, Noctuidae, Xyleninae)
Author
Brou Jr., Vernon
Louisiana State Arthropod Museum, Florida State Collection of Arthropods, Lepidopterists Society, Southern Lepidopterists Society, Washington Entomolo ,,
Author
Lafontaine, Donald
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:author:
Canadian National Collection of Insects, Arachnids, and Nematodes, Biodiversity Program, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, KW Neatby Bldg., C. E. F., Ottawa, Ontario, Canada K
text
ZooKeys
2009
2009-05-12
9
9
11
20
journal article
10.3897/zookeys.9.158
84d835b8-260b-4447-94d5-a944bec3eff1
1313–2970
576448
695C2170-652C-4675-804A-909EEF827994
Lithophane
abita
Brou & Lafontaine
,
sp. n.
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:
346FF58C-13A6-42AF-8560-71D612F30B98
Figs 1, 2, 5, 6, 7
Type
material.
Holotype
♁ (
Fig.1
): USA,
Louisiana
,
St. Tammany Parish
,
4.2 miles
(
6.8 km
) NE of
Abita Springs
,
Sec
[tion] 24,
T
[ownship] 6 S[outh],
R
[ange] 12 E[ast],
14 Feb. 2002
,
Vernon A.
Brou Jr. Deposited
in
Canadian National Collection of Insects
,
Arachnids
, and
Nematodes
(
CNC
),
Ottawa
,
Canada
.
Allotype
♀
(
Fig. 2
): same locality and collector,
6 Dec. 2003
. Deposited in
CNC
.
Paratypes
: 145 ♁,
162 ♀
.
Alabama
:
Baldwin Co.
,
Bon Secour National Wildlife Refuge
,
Sec.
24,
T9
S,
R2
E,
18 Jan. 1993
,
Richard L. Brown
(1 ♁).
Florida
:
Alachua Co.
,
Gainesville
,
19 Dec. 1982
,
Edward C. Knudson
(
1 ♀
)
;
Alachua Co.
,
Gainesville
,
14 Feb. 2004
,
Jeffrey
R
.
Slotten
(
1 ♀
)
;
Baker Co.
,
Baxter
,
29 Dec. 1990
,
John S. Kutis
(
1 ♀
),
Pinhook Swamp
,
24 Feb. 2001
,
Hugo L. Kons Jr.
(1 ♁)
;
Collier Co.
,
Golden Gate Estates
26 Jan. 1991
,
John S. Kutis
(1 ♁)
;
Duval Co.
,
Jacksonville
,
11 Mar. 1977
,
H.D. Baggett
(
1 ♀
)
;
Hernando Co.
,
1 Mar. 2007
,
James
T
.
Vargo
(1 ♁)
;
Hillsborough Co.
,
Lutz
,
Florida
, 13 &
22 Mar. 1911
,
F. W. Friday
(
2 ♀
)
;
Marion Co.
,
Bay Lake
,
0.5 mi.
west of CR315,
7 Feb. 1991
,
John S. Kutis
(1 ♁)
; Pasco Co., Clay Sink, Withlacoochee St. Forest,
6 Feb. 1991
, John S. Kutis (
1 ♀
);
Putnam Co.
,
Putnam Hall Post Office
,
3 Mar. 2004
,
Jeffrey
R
.
Slotten
(1 ♁)
;
Sumpter Co.
,
Withlacoochee St. Forest
,
5 Feb. 1991
,
John
S.
Kutis
(
1 ♀
), same location and collector,
9 Feb. 1991
(
1 ♀
), same location,
9 Feb. 1991
,
Richard
M.
Gillmore
(
1 ♀
)
;
Volusia Co.
,
Cassadaga
,
11 Feb. 1963
, S.
V
.
Fuller
(1 ♁),
15 Feb. 1964
, same location and collector (1 ♁),
23 Feb. 1966
, same location and collector (1 ♁,
1 ♀
).
Georgia
:
Long Co.
,
Griffin Ridge Wildlife Management Area
,
NE of Altamaha River
,
3 mi.
SW of Ludowici
,
3–4 Mar. 2004
,
James K. Adams
(
1 ♀
).
Louisiana
: same locality and collector as for
holotype
,
21 Nov.–29 Mar. 1982
–2009 (128 ♁,
138 ♀
).
Maryland
:
Calvert Co.
,
Battle Creek
Cypress Swamp, D
. Williams/
A. Brown
,
14 Feb. 1990
,
H. Godwin Stevensen
(2 ♁)
;
same locality and collector,
Dwight F. Williams
,
22 Oct. 1989
(1 ♁)
;
Worcester Co.
,
Pokomoke State Forest
,
17 Oct. 1996
and
18 Oct. 1998
,
J. Glaser
(
3 ♀
)
;
Worcester Co.
,
Sturges Creek
Cypress Swamp
,
18 Oct. 1998
,
J. Glaser
(
1 ♀
).
Mississippi
:
Tishomingo Co.
,
Tishomingo State Park
,
34° 35’ 54” N
,
88° 10’ 43” W
,
3 Apr. 1998
,
Richard L. Brown
(1 ♁).
North Carolina
:
Carteret Co.
,
Junction of Hwy
101 and
Mill Creek
Road
,
22 Nov. 1973
,
J. Bolling Sullivan
(
1 ♀
)
;
Craven Co.
,
North Harlow
, 25 and
31 Mar. and 12 Nov. 1990
, 13 and
18 Feb. and 20 Mar. 1991
,
J. Bolling Sullivan
(3 ♁,
5 ♀
)
;
Jones Co.
,
Haywood Landing
,
3 Apr. 1996
and
8 Mar. 2000
, J
.
Bolling Sullivan (1 ♁,
1 ♀
);
Pender Co.
,
Shelter Gamelands
,
5 Apr. 1996
,
J. Bolling Sullivan
(
1 ♀
).
Paratypes
deposited in
CNC
;
Florida State
Collection of Arthropods
,
Figures 1-7.
Lithophane
spp.
1
,
L
.
abita
Brou & Lafontaine
, male,
holotype
,
USA
,
Louisiana
, St. Tammany Parish,
4.2 miles
(
6.8 km
) NE of Abita Springs.
2
,
L
.
abita
Brou & Lafontaine
, female,
allotype
,
USA
,
Louisiana
, St. Tammany Parish,
4.2 miles
(
6.8 km
) NE of Abita Springs.
3
,
L
.
adipel
(Benjamin)
,
USA
,
New Jersey
, Lakehurst.
4
,
L
.
thaxteri
Grote
, male,
Canada
,
New Brunswick
, Edmundston.
5
,
L
.
abita
Brou & Lafontaine
, male genital capsule.
6
.
L
.
abita
Brou & Lafontaine
, male aedeagus with vesica everted.
7
,
L
.
abita
Brou & Lafontaine
, female genitalia.
Gainesville;
Louisiana State
Arthropod Museum, Baton Rouge;
Mississippi
Entomological Museum; Cornell University Collection, Ithaca,
New York
; National Museum of Natural History [
USNM
],
Washington
, DC; and the private collections of: James K. Adams, Robert J. Borth, Richard M. Gillmore, Edward C. Knudson, Hugo L. Kons Jr., Jeffrey
R
. Slotten, J. Bolling Sullivan, and the senior author. Primary types are designated with the words
Holotype
and
Allotype
in black text on red labels;
paratypes
are designated with the word
Paratype
in black text on yellow labels.
Etymology
.
The epithet is derived from the
type
locality near which all of the known
Louisiana
specimens have been taken, the town of Abita Springs, St. Tammany Parish,
Louisiana
,
USA
.
Diagnosis
.
Lithophane abita
is a medium-sized species of
Lithophane
with a gray forewing and pinkish-fuscous hindwing. Th e forewing maculation tends to be pale and muted, except for a contrasting black line in the fold connecting the deeply zigzagged antemedial and postmedial lines. In these superficial characters, it has the appearance of some species in the
Lithophane lepida
Grote
species-group of which only
Lithophane adipel
(Benjamin)
(
Fig. 3
) occurs in southeastern
United States
. It is even more similar to
Lithophane thaxteri
Grote
(
Fig. 4
), which like
L
.
abita
, has a brown flush to the area around the reniform spot and a black line defining the lower edge of the reniform spot, but
L
.
thaxteri
occurs in the boreal zone of
Canada
and in eastern
United States
as far south as
New Jersey
, but probably will not be found within the range of
L
.
abita
. The male genitalia of
L
.
abita
, however, are unique within the genus and the characteristic shape of the apices of the valves can be seen by brushing away some scales from the end of the abdomen. Th e digitus of the right valve projects beyond the apex of the valve as a long, curved, saber-like spine that is almost ⅔ as long as the valve (
Fig. 5
); that of the left valve is short, stout, and apically blunt with the part of the digitus extending beyond the valve about ¼ of the length of that of the right valve. Th e spine-like process at the apex of the right valve can often be seen with the naked eye protruding from the end of the abdomen. The association of
L. abita
with bald cypress (
Taxodium distichum
Rich.
), the probable larval host, is also unique within
Lithophane
.
Description
.
Males and females similar in all external characters except size.
Head
: color usually light to medium slate gray, occasional specimens dark gray; pronounced frontal tuft; a wide lateral black band of scales on center of head between eyes defined above and below by a bright white line of scales, upper line at a position above eye and below antenna: antenna filiform, simple, slender, and acuminate, similar gray in color, more so dorsally and near base of shaft; labial palp with black scales laterally and gray scales ventrally and dorsally; labial palp peppered with either black or gray scales with white tips; ventral surface of palp with long scales forming a pointed tuft projecting anteroventrally slightly beyond apex of palp.
Thorax
: dorsal color similar to that of head and forewing ground color except for wide transverse dark brown band on prothoracic collar with upper margin defined by distinct black line with upper scales forming a bright white line; anterior part of thorax with dorsal partially divided tuft of scales; ventral color of thorax light pinkish brown, gray, or fuscous, with area between legs and wings entirely black; outer side of foreleg coxa a mixture of black and white scales (appearing gray to naked eye), with a short group of longitudinal black scales emanating from base; scales on the inner side of coxa brownish gray with a fine longitudinal line of black scales; femur covered with black and white scales (appearing gray to naked eye) with black scales more concentrated near trochanter; scales on coxa of midleg a mixture of gray and white, except near trochanter, where scales form a band of black followed by a band of white; similar black and white bands continue along remainder of midleg femur, tibia, and tarsus; hindleg similar in color and appearance to midleg.
Abdomen
: dorsal color fuscous with pink suffusion throughout; ventral color same as dorsal.
Forewing
: dorsal ground color matching that on dorsum of head and thorax; maculation varying from strongly marked to barely distinguishable; weakly marked specimens appear to have been on the wing longer, but do not necessarily appear exceptionally worn; most specimens with very faint, sometimes barely distinguishable, bifurcating black basal dash; antemedial (am) line mostly faint, deeply zigzagged, defined in paler gray and partly bordered on outer edge by black, except in area of fold where am line sharply defined in black forming an outward projecting “V” that extends into prominent, black dash in fold parallel to lower margin of wing and extends to postmedial (pm) line; pm line deeply serrated but faint, partly defined by pale gray and dark gray scales; subterminal line also faintly defined in pale and dark gray but usually bordered in subterminal area by series of diffuse, dark-gray, wedge-shaped spots; terminal area concolorous with medial area, or very slightly darker with wing veins partly defined in black; terminal line incomplete, dark gray, usually stronger between veins; orbicular spot a rounded or slightly oblong paler gray shade defined mainly by the darker gray shading surrounding it; a prominent crescentic black line extends from outer lower edge of orbicular spot and around lower margin of reniform spot; reniform spot barely distinguishable as a paler gray outline above black line on lower margin of spot; forewing with fuscous-brown scales in area between reniform and orbicular spots, and in lower part of reniform. Ventral color of forewing pale luteous brown on basal half of wing, pinkish brown on distal half and forming a darker marginal shade; reniform spot diffuse, dark brown, usually crescent-shaped; terminal line defined by faint black scales accentuated with conspicuous black scales forming v-shaped wedges between veins; fringe gray. Wing length: male:
16.7 mm
(15.7–18.0, n = 25); female:
17.1 mm
(15.6–18.4, n = 25).
Hindwing
: dorsal color fuscous with pinkish suffusion throughout; fringe contrastingly lighter slate gray, especially at base of fringe; terminal line usually expressed as diffuse darker brown lines most often only between veins on outer margin of wing; discal spot crescentic, darker than ground color but barely discernable. Ventral color entirely light pink with numerous tiny brown scales sprinkled over entire surface; terminal line generally similar to that on dorsal surface; discal spot very large, brownish-black spot in center of wing; postmedial line a faint but discernable dark, broad line.
Male genitalia
(n = 6): genital capsule (
Fig. 5
) with supporting ring modified, so enlarged vinculum and pleural sclerite occupy basal ⅔ of ring, presumably to support greatly enlarged base of valve; tegumen proportionally reduced to dorsal ⅓ of ring; uncus short, cylindrical, expanded at apex; juxta a very large diamond-shaped plate oc- cupying most of area inside genital ring; valves short and triangular, very large at base and tapering to narrow apex; valves asymmetrical; right sacculus large, twice as long as cucullus; cucullus reduced with sclerotized finger-like process at base of cucullus on dorsal margin of valve; apical part of cucullus reduced to rounded, almost membranous flap without any trace of a corona; digitus massive, arising from costal margin of valve, covering basal b of cucullus, then bending dorsally to project posterodorsally from end of valve as a long, tapered, saber-like spine; clasper reduced to Y-shaped sclerite at apex of valve with ampulla projecting beyond costal margin of valve as lightly sclerotized, finger-like process; left valve similar to right valve, except sacculus not as enlarged dorsally at base, costal process at base of cucullus triangular, part of left digitus projecting from valve ¼ as long as saber-like extension of right digitus, and apex of left digitus blunt and rounded. Aedeagus (
Fig. 6
) cylindrical, heavily sclerotized, about 6 × as long as wide; vesica about 1½ × as long as aedeagus; basal 1/6 as wide as aedeagus; apical part inflated and sac-like, curving in an arc 180° to project anteriorly; vesica with two short diverticula, one short preapical on dorsal surface and one on ventral surface at apex; apex of vesica with two subapical patches of spine-like cornuti, one dorsal and one ventral.
Female genitalia
(n = 5) (
Fig. 7
): corpus bursae with prominent postmedial constriction giving it a figure 8-shape; without signa; posterior part of corpus bursae with short, lightly sclerotized, appendix bursae to left of ductus bursae; ductus bursae about ⅓ as long as corpus bursae, sclerotized posteriorly but more lightly sclerotized anteriorly and wider at corpus bursae; ostium bursae sclerotized, tapered anteriorly, truncated abruptly at membranous connection with ductus bursae; anterior apophyses slightly shorter, but much stouter, than posterior apohyses, about ¼ × longer than ring of abdominal segment VIII; anal papillae lightly sclerotized, rounded at apex, about as long as membranous connection to abdominal segment VIII; covered by mixture of short and longer hair-like setae.
Biology
and distribution.
Within
Louisiana
,
Lithophane abita
is single brooded with adults on the wing from November 21 to March 29 (
Fig. 8
). Elsewhere the flight season extends from 17 October (
Maryland
) to early April (
Mississippi
and
North Carolina
).
Lithophane abita
has been confirmed from the states of
Alabama
,
Florida
,
Georgia
,
Louisiana
,
Maryland
,
Mississippi
, and
North Carolina
. Th e suspected host plant is bald cypress,
Taxodium distichum
Rich. In
Maryland
the three known localites are in bald cypress swamps within a few kilometers of the northernmost site of natu- rally occurring bald cypress trees. In
Florida
, this moth is often found in or very close to pond cypress domes (R. M. Gillmore, pers. comm.). A single
Florida
specimen was labeled as captured at fruit bait.
Figure 8.
Seasonal occurrence of
Lithophane abita
at type locality (Abita Springs, Louisiana).
Remarks
.
R. M. Gillmore provided the authors with numerous additional
Florida
records acquired from various sources, from the counties already listed in the
paratype
series. Th ese specimens are not included as
paratypes
due to their poor quality.
Within
Louisiana
,
L
.
abita
was captured using ultraviolet light traps only at the Abita Springs location despite 39 continuous years of collecting using the same collecting methods throughout the State. No species of
Lithophane
was previously recorded for
Louisiana
by
Chapin and Callahan (1967)
, who published the only list of
Noctuidae
for the state. However, intensive collecting by the senior author at the
type
locality of
L. abita
has turned up about 10
Lithophane
species, some requiring further study to confirm their identity.[move this and the next paragraph to beginning of Discussion section]
Reference to this undescribed species can be found dating back 44 years to
Kimball’s (1965)
book on the
Lepidoptera
of
Florida
. Under the heading
Lithophane
sp.,
Kimball (1965: 93)
states that [John G.] Franclemont is describing it. Kimball listed six specimens from the
Florida
counties of Alachua, Escambia, Hillsborough, and Jefferson with collecting dates on three of the specimens from Lutz, Hillsborough Co., dating back 93 years. Th e oldest specimens of
L
.
abita
we were able to find were captured 98 years ago in 1911, also at Lutz,
Florida
.