Lythria (Lythria) plumularia ( Freyer, 1831 )

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 : 39-40

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.11245002

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03821B70-9F43-875C-6B82-F8DFFD81FD30

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Lythria (Lythria) plumularia ( Freyer, 1831 )
status

 

Lythria (Lythria) plumularia ( Freyer, 1831) View in CoL

Pl. 2 View PLATE 2. 4 : 5a–5h

Fidonia View in CoL (Orig. “Gen. XCVIII. Fidonia View in CoL . Geom.[etra]”) plumularia Freyer, 1831: 68 View in CoL , Tab. 36, fig. 3. TL: [ Switzerland]: Thur (ST) Distribution. Alps in south-eastern France, northern Italy, southern Switzerland, through Austria to southern Germany (Bavarian Alps).

The placement of the genus Lythria View in CoL in the Geometridae View in CoL system remained controversial until the end of the first decade of the XXI century. Only molecular genetic studies, which included, in addition to the mitochondrial COI gene, 4 more nuclear markers, were able to link this genus convincingly with the Sterrhinae View in CoL subfamily. An accurate tribal association was proposed only a few years ago ( Sihvonen et al. 2020), and was also based on data of multigene analysis (11 molecular markers). The difficulty of using morphological characteristics of the genus Lythria View in CoL for its tribal association was due to the fact that its widespread and well known members have “advanced” features, and some structures (e.g. the signum in the female genitalia) are secondarily lost. If the morphology of both male and female genitalia of L. (M.) venustata View in CoL (a basal branch of the generic tree of Lythria View in CoL ) had been available to lepidopterists in the pre-molecular epoch, this species could well have been the key to understanding the place of this genus in the Sterrhinae View in CoL system.

Now that the males and females of all recent Lythria species are known, it is possible to compile a complete identification keys to this genus. We provide two such keys below (one by external characteristics, and one based on the structure of the genitalia).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Lepidoptera

Family

Geometridae

Genus

Lythria

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