Trichophthalma (Eurygastromyia) amaena Bigot, 1881: 20
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5360.2.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:32DA84C3-AEC5-400A-8280-451919E87A50 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10247517 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A987FD-CB24-FFAE-E9B7-495CFE82A7A5 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Trichophthalma (Eurygastromyia) amaena Bigot, 1881: 20 |
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Trichophthalma (Eurygastromyia) amaena Bigot, 1881: 20 View in CoL .
( Figs. 43–44 View FIGURES 43–44 )
Eurygastromyia niveicincta Lichtwardt, 1910: 610 . Type-locality: Argentina, Chubut, Valle del Lago Blanco.
Trichophthalma amoena View in CoL of authors misspelling.
Holotype. Lost , “ Chile ” . Neotype. Male ( MCCC), Chile, Llanquihue , Casa Pangue .
Distribution. Argentina. (Neuquén, Río Negro, Chubut). Chile. Región del Biobío: Concepción Province (Hualpén). Región de Los Lagos: Llanquihue Province (Casa Pangue). Región de Magallanes: Magallanes Province (Estero Guayrabo, Ojo Bueno, Punta Arenas, Parcelas, NP Torres del Paine) ( Fig. 53 View FIGURE 53 ). Uruguay.
References. Lichtward, 1910: 608, 609 (as syn. of T. landbecki View in CoL , as amaena View in CoL ,); Edwards, 1930: 181 (in key), 182 (com., as amoena View in CoL , misspelling); Bequaert, 1932: 29 (com.); Stuardo, 1934b: 243–245 (biol., dist., as T. amaena View in CoL ); Stuardo, 1939: 78 (as amaena View in CoL ); Stuardo, 1946: 97 (cat., [ Trichophthalma (Trichophthalma) View in CoL ], as amaena View in CoL ); Papavero, 1968: 2 (cat., as amoena View in CoL ); Angulo, 1971: 44 (in key), 100–102 (redes., figs. 79 (sper.), 80 (male ter.), 87 (aede.), 143 (dist.) (Trichopthalma, as amaena View in CoL ); Bernardi, 1973: 250 (list, as amoena View in CoL ); Cekalovic & Artigas, 1974: 242 (cat., as amaena View in CoL ); Angulo, 1976: 197 (com., dist.); Bernardi, 1976: 197 (dist., as amoena View in CoL ); Angulo, 1987: 9 (list, as amoena View in CoL ); Aizen et al., 2002: 83 (list), 84 (com., as amoena View in CoL ); Vázquez & Simberloff, 2002: 621 (list, as amoena View in CoL ); Vázquez & Simberloff, 2003: 1081 (list); Devoto & Medan, 2006: 32 (ecol., biol.), 33–34 (list), 36–37 (com., as amoena View in CoL ); Medan & Devoto, 2008: 156, 157 (fig. adult), 158 (com.), 159 (in key, as amoena View in CoL ); Papavero & Bernardi, 2009a: 8 (cat.); Kosmann et al., 2014: 411 (wing, in key), 415 (list, as amoena View in CoL ).
Biology. The species have been recorded by citizen scientists to feed on flowers of Embothrium coccineum J. R. Forst & G. Forst and Spartium junceum Linneus.Additionally , according to Vasquéz & Simberloff (2003). T. amaena visits the flowers of Berberis microphylla G. Forst (mentioned as B. buxifolia ), Berberis darwinii Hook , Ribes magellanicum Poiret , and Schinus montanus Raddi (mentioned as S. patagonicus ). Moreover, Devoto & Medan (2006) described that T. amaena visiting the flowers of Azara lanceolata Hooker and Gaultheria phillyreaefolia (Pers.) Sleumer.
MCCC |
Marine Culture Collection of China |
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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Trichophthalma (Eurygastromyia) amaena Bigot, 1881: 20
González, Christian R., Elgueta, Mario, Carvacho, Camila, Pañinao-Monsálvez, Laura & Barahona-Segovia, Rodrigo M. 2023 |
Eurygastromyia niveicincta
Lichtwardt, B. 1910: 610 |
Trichophthalma (Eurygastromyia) amaena
Bigot, J. M. F. 1881: 20 |