Leichosila wagneri Schmidt, 2009

Schmidt, Christian, 2009, A new genus and two new species of arctiine tiger moth (Noctuidae, Arctiinae, Arctiini) from Costa Rica, ZooKeys 9 (9), pp. 89-96 : 95

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.9.151

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:3B75A32E-5332-4F74-A3BA-974ADDF626C4

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3792320

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/98429FDA-3B9D-44BA-8259-6D83D11CFFBB

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:98429FDA-3B9D-44BA-8259-6D83D11CFFBB

treatment provided by

Plazi (2020-04-27 17:26:14, last updated 2024-11-28 06:41:12)

scientific name

Leichosila wagneri Schmidt
status

sp. nov.

Leichosila wagneri Schmidt , sp. n.

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:98429FDA-3B9D-44BA-8259-6D83D11CFFBB

( Figs. 2 View Figures 1-2 , 4 View Figures 3-5 , 7 View Figures 6-9 )

Type material. Holotype male – “C[osta]. RICA: Heredia: / 6 km ENE Vara Blanca , / 1950-2050m, 10°11’N / 84 07’W; 15 ii 2002 / David L. Wagner coll”; “INBio-OET- ALAS / transect / 20/L/01/011”; “Project / ALAS / INB0003216237”; “ HOLOTYPE / Leichosila / wagneri / Schmidt” [red label]; “Genitalia / CNC slide # / 14541”; deposited in INBIO. GoogleMaps

Diagnosis. Distinguished from L. talamanca by the smaller size and darker colouration of L. wagneri , and by the genitalic characters given under the diagnosis for L. talamanca .

Description. A detailed description is given above in the genus description. Characters specific to L. wagneri are as follows: Male (female unknown). Forewing – length 13.4 (n = 1); ground colour dark grey. Hindwing – ground colour dark grey, with indistinct, irregular dark grey subterminal spots and medial spot. Male genitalia – Uncus parallelsided basally, then tapering apically, i. e. bottle-shaped in dorsal profile ( Fig. 7 View Figures 6-9 ); vesica with left diverticulum of two ventro-basal diverticula conical and pointed ( Fig. 4b View Figures 3-5 ).

Etymology. This species is named after David L. Wagner, who collected the type specimen, and whose studies continue to vastly improve our knowledge of the larval biology of North American Lepidoptera .

Distribution and biology. Leichosila wagneri is known only from the type specimen, collected in high elevation forest (1950-2050 m) on Volcán Barva (Cordillera Central) in mid February.

Gallery Image

Figures 1-2. Adult habitus of Leichosila gen. n. 1. Leichosila talamanca sp. n., male holotype. 2. Leichosila wagneri sp. n., male holotype.

Gallery Image

Figures 3-5. Male genitalia of Leichosila. 3a. L. talamanca (paratype), genital capsule (ventral view); 3b. phallus (left lateral view), with inflated vesica (ventrobasal diverticulum highlighted); 4a. L. wagneri (holotype), genital capsule (ventral view); 4b. phallus (left lateral view) with inflated vesica (ventrobasal diverticulum highlighted); 5. L. talamanca, 8th abdominal sternite, showing medioventral sclerite and lateral lobes.

Gallery Image

Figures 6-9. Structural features of Leichosila. 6. L. talamanca, uncus (dorsal view); 7. L. wagneri, uncus (dorsal view); 8. L. talamanca, juxta; 9. L. talamanca, antenna (segments 14 – 18), ventral view (setae and cilia omitted except on segment 14).

CNC

Canadian National Collection of Insects, Arachnids, and Nematodes

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Lepidoptera

Family

Erebidae

SubFamily

Arctiinae

Tribe

Arctiini

Genus

Leichosila