Lythria (Lythria) Hübner, [1823]

Makhov, I. A., Gorbunov, P. Yu. & Lukhtanov, V. A., 2024, Lythria (Microlythria subgen. nov.) venustata Staudinger, 1882 (Lepidoptera: Geometridae): distribution and description of the female, with a brief review of the genus, Zootaxa 5448 (1), pp. 29-48 : 38-40

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5448.1.2

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:A74BE92D-00DD-4761-99EE-B2F7412A5EC3

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11231088

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03821B70-9F40-875C-6B82-F9AEFA19F829

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Lythria (Lythria) Hübner, [1823]
status

 

Lythria (Lythria) Hübner, [1823]

Type species. Phalaena purpuraria Linnaeus, 1758 View in CoL .

Diagnosis. In male, the vinculum is deeply concave ventrally, with the pointed dorso-distal corners; the valva bears a distal membranous part (valvula), the valva-genital segment articulation is flexible; the juxta and sclerotized anellus are absent; sclerotized tegumen is not developed; in female, the corpus bursae without signum.

Species included. L. (L.) cruentaria ( Hufnagel, 1767) ; L. (L.) sanguinaria ( Duponchel, 1842) ; L. (L.) purpuraria ( Linnaeus, 1758) and L. (L.) plumularia ( Freyer, 1831) .

Identification key to Lythria species

Wing pattern:

1. Forewing pattern dark (dark brown or purple brown), contrasting with dark cream or beige ground colour, basal area markedly darkened........................................................................................... 2

– Ground colour of forewing yellowish orange to brownish yellow; pattern reddish, often with olive-grey scales, basal area barely darkened........................................................................................... 3

2. Hindwing without submarginal fascia; fringes of both wings dark brown, almost black (Pl. 1: 1a–1c)...... L. (M.) venustata

– Hindwing with dark submarginal fascia or its distinct trace reaching costal margin; fringes of both wings dark reddish ( Pl. 2 View PLATE 2. 4 : 5a–5h)............................................................................... L. (L.) plumularia

3. Medial fascia of forewing commonly reduced to a costal spot, at equal distances from antemedial and postmedial fasciae, never fused with them ( Pl. 2 View PLATE 2. 4 : 4a–4i)............................................................. L. (L.) purpuraria

– Medial fascia of forewing usually present, well developed, sometimes confluent with antemedial fascia................ 4

4. Postmedial fascia of forewing continuous; medial fascia of forewing usually closer to postmedial one or confluent with that; antemedial fascia commonly broad and reaches veins Cu 2 (occasionally transverse fasciae absent) (Pl. 1: 2a–2o)................................................................................................. L. (L.) cruentaria

– Postmedial fascia of forewing usually broken into a row of reddish dashes or spots on veins; medial fascia not fused with postmedial one; antemedial fascia often marked on costa only (Pl. 1: 3a–3d)....................... L. (L.) sanguinaria

Genitalia structure:

1. In male ( Figs 7A–7F View FIGURE 7 ) valvae and genital segment articulated rigidly, distal membranous part of valva (valvula) absent, juxta well developed; in female ( Fig. 8B View FIGURE 8 ) corpus bursae with rhombic lamellar signum...................... L. (M.) venustata

– In male valvae-genital segment articulation flexible, distal membranous part of valva (valvula) developed, juxta not developed; in female signum absent................................................................................ 2

2. In male vesica with a single cornutus, valva roughly rectangular, valvula long and narrow; in female lamella antevaginalis not developed, ductus bursae distinctly narrower than posterior part of corpus bursae................................... 3

– In male vesica with two cornuti, valva roughly triangular, valvula short, rounded sack-like; in female lamella antevaginalis well developed, sclerotized, ductus bursae equal in width with posterior part of corpus bursae or broader.................... 4

3. In male ( Figs 7G–7I View FIGURE 7 ) coecum of aedeagus swollen, cornutus smaller than in L. sanguinaria ; in female ( Figs 8C, 8E View FIGURE 8 ) ductus bursae long, almost equal in length to broader posterior part of corpus bursae......................... L. (L.) cruentaria

– In male ( Figs 7J–7L View FIGURE 7 ) coecum of aedeagus not swollen, cornutus longer and stouter than in L. cruentaria ; in female ( Fig. 8D View FIGURE 8 ) ductus bursae short, no longer than ½ length of broader posterior part of corpus bursae............... L. (L.) sanguinaria

4. In male ( Figs 7O, 7P View FIGURE 7 ) valva short: length of its costal margin approximately equal to its greatest width; in female ( Figs 9A–9C View FIGURE 9 ) posterior edge of lamella antevaginalis not straight: clearly round or with distinct medial projection (often pointed apically), ostium C-shaped....................................................................... L. (L.) purpuraria

– In male ( Figs 7M, 7N View FIGURE 7 ) valva longer: length of its costal margin clearly exceeding its greatest width; in female ( Figs 9D, 9E View FIGURE 9 ) posterior edge of lamella antevaginalis almost straight, without any projections, ostium not C-shaped.... L. (L.) plumularia

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Lepidoptera

Family

Geometridae

Genus

Lythria

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