Philaethria constantinoi Salazar, 1991
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.199882 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6211177 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03CF8A54-0048-FFD6-90FE-F983FAF01023 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Philaethria constantinoi Salazar, 1991 |
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Philaethria constantinoi Salazar, 1991
( Figs. 8, 9 View FIGURES 2 - 11. 2. P )
Shilap Rvta Lepid. 19(76):273–279. fig. 1 (female), fig.2, 3 (male and female genitalia)
Type locality. Rio Tatabro, 600 m, Anchicayá, Valle, Costa Pacifica, Colombia. Type: ( MHNUC):Allotype female: illustrated in Salazar (1991). fig. 1. Paratype male, illustrated in Constantino & Salazar, 2007: 354, figs.25, 26 (CFC).
Diagnosis. Forewing length 58–60 mm in males and 60–62 mm in females. Philaethria constantinoi is easily separated from the other species by the intense orange inner postdiscal band on the ventral surface of the hindwing, not red as in P. dido . HW medial postdiscal band orange; FW postmedial area very reduced; VFW medial cell bar orange. P. constantinoi is the largest species of Philaethria in the neotropical region and is also the largest of all the heliconiini reaching a wingspan of 62 mm from base to apex.
Haploid chromosome number: n=62 (voucher specimen fig.8) from W. Colombia (RioTatabro-Anchicayá, Valle)
Male genitalia ( Fig. 34 View FIGURES 32 – 41 ): As illustrated. Saccus short and straight, vinculum stout, slightly curved and swollen basally, tegumen rounded distally with setae in the medial area; uncus long, curved dorsally, tapering gradually to pointed tip; gnathos short and slightly curved; valvae with a very long basal hook curved forward, reaching the base of the tegumen (in P. dido do not reach the tegumen), tip of uncus, with a swollen arm with a round head armed with microspines; aedeagus long and straight, tapering gadually to pointed tip.
Distribution and habitat. P. constantinoi is an endemic and rare species from the Chocó biogeographic region in W. Colombia and Ecuador. It occurs from 100 to 800 m in association with rain forest habitats in the western slopes of the Cordillera Occidental in Colombia (Chocó, Valle, Cauca) to northwestern Ecuador (Esmeraldas). P. constantinoi flies sympatrically with P. dido chocoensis . Adults fly above the forest canopy as solitary individuals and never visit wet sand.
Hostplant and Immature stages. unknown.
Material examined. COLOMBIA: CHOCO: San José del Palmar, 800 m, J. A. Salazar leg. (JAS). RISARALDA: Santa Cecilia, 400 m, J. A. Salazar leg. (JAS). VALLE: Bajo Anchicayá, Rio Tatabro, 100 m, L.M. Constantino leg. ( MHNUC), Rio Tatabro, 200 m, L. M. Constantino leg. (CFC), Bellavista, Central Hidroelectrica del Bajo Anchicayá, 800 m, C.A. Saldarriaga leg. (CFC), Yatacué, Hidroelectrica del Alto Anchicayá, 600 m, L.M. Constantino leg (CFC). ECUADOR: ESMERALDAS: Cerro Mutiles, 100 m, K. Willmott leg. (KW JH).
CHOCO |
Universidad Tecnológica del Chocó |
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Heliconiinae |
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