Melitaea, Fabricius, 1807

Kolesnichenko, Kirill A. & Kotlobay, Anatoly A., 2022, Review of the fritillary species systematically close to Melitaea lutko Evans, 1932 (Lepidoptera: Nymphalidae) with analysis of their geographic distribution and interrelations with host plants, European Journal of Taxonomy 830 (1), pp. 1-60 : 47-49

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2022.830.1865

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:C1F47AD9-ECF6-4F0F-9928-55A45332FF4B

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6855865

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/EB42F330-FFF9-B313-93A7-FE8BFAA5FC8F

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Melitaea
status

 

Key for determining the representatives of the lutko species group View in CoL by males

1. Thin harpe is (similar in shape to a scythe) without teeth on its inner surface ( Fig. 18F–I View Fig ), in rare cases teeth are weakly expressed ( Fig. 18F View Fig ); when looking at the genitalia from above ( Fig. 16D–H View Fig ), the length of harpe is half of the length of valva; the slender caudal process of valva with one small spine in the distal part on the dorsal surface; the length of the caudal process is usually 3 times its width ( Fig. 29C, E View Fig ). Saccus is wide ( Fig. 16E–I View Fig ), distally rounded, its length is 1.5 times as great as width. UPS pattern is contrasting, with a well-developed UPF pale-yellow postdiscal area ( Fig. 6A– D View Fig ). Afghanistan, Pakistan: Balochistan .................................................. M. mimetica Higgins, 1940 View in CoL

– Harpe is noticeably thickened in the central part (it resembles a sickle in shape), there are always clearly visible teeth on its inner surface ( Figs 18A–E View Fig , 19 View Fig ); when looking at the genitalia from above, the length of harpe is about a third of the length of valva (in the case of M. shahvarica sp. nov., it can be a half of the length) ( Fig. 16A–C View Fig ); the caudal process of valva is usually wide, with several spines in the distal part on the dorsal surface, the length of the caudal process is 1.5 times its width. Saccus is thin, distally pointed, its length is 2 times as great as width ( Figs 16A–C View Fig , 17 View Fig ). UPS pattern of the is monophonic with a weakly developed UPF postdiscal pale-yellow area ........................... 2

2. Harpe is short, strongly expanded in the central part, its length is 2 times as long as width ( Fig. 18D– E View Fig ). On the inner surface of harpe there is a well-defined row of teeth with a powerful tooth in the central part and small teeth on both sides of it. The broad caudal process of valva is elongated and distally strongly inwardly concave with a pointed apex ( Figs 3H–I View Fig , 29F View Fig ). UPH black basal suffusion is well developed and covers more than a third of the wing surface, UPH submarginal row is formed by interconnected black lunules ( Fig. 2A View Fig ). Pakistan: Chitral, Birmoglasht, Malakand, Murree ............................................................................................................... M. lutko Evans, 1932 View in CoL

– The length of harpe is 3–4 times as great as width, there are small and rare teeth on the inner surface of harpe ( Figs 18A–C View Fig , 19 View Fig ). The caudal process is distally not strongly inwardly concave with a pointed apex ( Figs 10 View Fig , 22 View Fig , 29A–B, D, G–H View Fig ). UPH black basal suffusion covers less than a third of the wing surface ( Figs 2B–D View Fig , 9A–D View Fig , 15A–D View Fig , 21A–D View Fig ) ................................................................... 3

3. Valva is sharply expanded in the central part, due to a well-marked protrusion of the ventral side, the length of valva is 1.5 times as great as width ( Figs 22 View Fig , 29A View Fig ). The thin distal part of harpe is curved downwards, there are few teeth on its inner surface ( Fig. 18A–C View Fig ). The anterior and posterior parts of aedeagus are approximately on the same straight line, there is no protrusion at the junction of both parts of aedeagus on the ventral side ( Fig. 29A View Fig ). UPH submarginal row is often reduced. There is UPF black macule located between veins Sc and R5 and formed by the fused submarginal and postdiscal costal dots centered with orange or pale spot. UPH discal macules are either absent or expressed only as a row of dots between the veins A2–M3 ( Fig. 21A–D View Fig ). Iran: East Elburz ........... ........................................................................................................................ M. shahvarica sp. nov.

– Valva is elongated, its length is 2 times as great as width, the ventral protrusion of the valva is smoothed ( Fig. 10 View Fig ). Harpe is noticeably thickened in the central part due to the presence of teeth on the inner surface ( Fig. 19 View Fig ). The posterior part of aedeagus is mostly located at an angle to the anterior one and is directed downward, at the junction of both parts of aedeagus on the ventral side there is a well-marked protrusion ( Figs 10 View Fig , 29B View Fig ). UPH submarginal row is well defined (with rare exceptions) ( Fig. 15A–D View Fig ). UPF black macule located between veins Sc and R5 and formed by the fused submarginal and postdiscal costal dots is absent. UPH discal row is well defined ( ssp. binaludica subsp. nov.) or absent ( ssp. timandra ). Iran, Turkmenistan, Afghanistan........................ ....................................................................................... M. timandra Coutsis & van Oorschot, 2014

Key for determining the representatives of the lutko species group by females

1. Postvaginal plate is triangular-shaped with wide lateral edges and narrowed distally ( Figs 4F–I View Fig , 11 View Fig ) ..................................................................................................................................................... 3

– Postvaginal plate is oval or broadly oval ( Fig. 4A–E View Fig ) ...................................................................... 2

2. UPS black pattern is expanded and well developed: UPH basal suffusion covers at least a third of the wing surface, UPF postdiscal row, as well as UPH discal and submarginal rows are well developed along the entire length of the wings ( Fig. 2E View Fig ). Pakistan: Chitral, Birmoglasht, Malakand, Murree .............................................................................................................. M. lutko Evans, 1932 View in CoL

– UPS black pattern is reduced: UPH basal suffusion covers noticeably less than a quarter of the wing surface, UPF postdiscal row is represented by 1–2 dots at the costal edge, UPH discal and submarginal row are reduced or partly reduced ( Fig. 21E–H View Fig ). Iran: East Elburz .............. M. shahvarica sp. nov.

3. The antevaginal plate is expanded in the dorsoventral direction, its outer edge extends beyond the boundaries of the bend of the postvaginal plate (auricules) ( Fig. 4F–I View Fig ); UPF with a well-defined paleyellowish postdiscal area and pale-yellowish macule in the distal part of discoidal cell ( Fig. 6E–H View Fig ). Afghanistan, Pakistan: Balochistan ........................................................ M. mimetica Higgins, 1940 View in CoL

– The antevaginal plate is narrow in the dorsoventral direction, its outer edge does not extend out or barely extends beyond the boundaries of the bend of the postvaginal plate (auricules) ( Fig. 11 View Fig ); UPF with a weakly defined pale-yellowish postdiscal area ( Figs 9E–H View Fig , 15E–H View Fig ). Iran, Turkmenistan, Afghanistan................................................................... M. timandra Coutsis & van Oorschot, 2014

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Lepidoptera

Family

Nymphalidae

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