Alesa telephae (Boisduval, 1836)
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5284.1.3 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:7334FB57-41A0-47CA-BCBF-FA108B13CEC1 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7930796 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03FB5F61-FFBE-FFCF-FF36-FD6C0832FD47 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Alesa telephae (Boisduval, 1836) |
status |
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Alesa telephae (Boisduval, 1836) View in CoL
Figs 18–19 View FIGURES 18–25 , 26–27 View FIGURES 26–29 , 64 View FIGURES 64–66 , 73 View FIGURES 71–76 , 78 View FIGURES 77–81 , 85 View FIGURES 82–85 , 94 View FIGURES 94
Eurybia telephae Boisduval, 1836 . Spec. Gén. Lép., Atlas, Expl. planches, p. 5, pl. 20, fig. 2 ([male] d); Cayenne, [ French Guiana].—Westwood, 1851, in Doubleday. Gen. diurn. Lep. 2, p. 417.
Alesa telephae View in CoL ; Bates, 1868. Jour. Linn. Soc. London, Zool., 9: 372, 414,—Herrich-Schäffer, 1868. Corr.—Blatt zool.-min. Ver. Regensburg 22: 121.—Kirby, 1871. Syn. Cat. diurn. Lep., p. 287.—Kirby, 1879, Cat. Coll. diurn. Lep. Hewitson, p. 186.—Mengel, 1905. Cat. Erycinidae , p. 55.— Stichel, 1910, in Wytsman. Gen. Ins. 112A, p. 81, pl. 4, fig. 12 f (leg), 112B, pl. 24, fig. 12 (female d, v).—Weeks, 1911. Illustr. diurn. Lep. 2, p. XII.— Seitz, 1916. Gross-Schmett. Erde 5, p. 652, pl. 127 (female d).—Stichel, 1925. Ztschr. wiss. Insektenbiol. 20: 21.— Stichel, 1930. Lep. Cat. 40: 293.— Lathy, 1932. Ann. & Mag. nat. Hist. (10)9 (53): 484.—R̂ber, 1931. Int. ent. Ztschr. 24: 389.— Rebillard, 1958. Mém. Mus. d’Hist. nat. (Paris) 15 (2): 167, fig. 8 (aedeagus), pl. 4, fig. 14 (female “ allotype ” d, v).—T. Emmel & G. Austin, 1990. Trop. Lep. 1 (1): 8.—Brown, 1993. Occas. Paper IUCN Sp. Surv. Comm. 8: 151.— d’Abrera, 1994. Butt. Neotrop. Region 6, Riodinidae View in CoL , p. 933, figs (male, female d).— Brévignon & Gallard, 1997. Lambillionea 97 (3)(1): 331, 334.—Murray, 2000. Jour. Res. Lep. 35: 58.— Lamas, 2001. Rev. per. Ent. 42: 43 (in part).— Callaghan & Lamas, 2004, Riodinidae View in CoL , p. 148, in Lamas (ed.). Checklist: Part 4A. Hesperioidea— Papilionoidea, in Heppner (ed.) Atlas of Neotropical Lepidoptera View in CoL 5A; syn.: prema View in CoL f. sapphirina.— Hall & Ahrenholz, 2010. Trop. Lep. Res. 20(1): 21, figs 2A–B (male, female d, v).—O. Mielke, Carneiro & Casagrande, 2010. Biota Neotr. 4 (10): 292.— Gallard & Fernandez, 2015. Bull. Soc. ent. France 120 (2), p. 135, 138, figs 7–10 (male, female d, v).— Brévignon, 2015. Bull. Soc. ent. France 120 (4): 453, figs 3, 4 (male d, v), 9–12 (male gen.).— Gallard, 2017. Riodinidae View in CoL Guyane, p. 55, pl. 10, fig. 2G (male d).
Alesa prema View in CoL f. sapphirina Biedermann, 1936. Bull. Soc. ent. France 41 (15): 258, pl. 3, figs 9, 10 (female d, v); holotype female, III-1934, Manacapuru, moyen Amazonas, [Amazonas, Brazil]; collection Biedermann.— Rebillard, 1958. Mém. Mus. d’Hist. nat. (Paris) 15 (2): 167.
Alesa aff. telephae View in CoL ; Lamas et al., 1991. Publ. Mus. Hist. nat. UNMSM(A) 40: 14.— Robbins et al., 1996, in Wilson & Sandoval. Manu, p. 235.
Diagnosis. Alesa telephae most similar species are A. negra and A. humilis . Males of A. telephae is distinguished from A. negra by the absence of purple iridescence covering the reddish spots on both wings upper side, and from A. humilis by the presence of iridescent rays on both wings upper side and by a submarginal reddish band on hindwing upper side. Alesa telephae differs from A. suzana by the upper side spots reddish instead of white. The female of A. telephae can be distinguished from the putative female of A. negra by the hindwing upper side submarginal spots orangish yellow, and the postdiscal white area of hindwing wider.
Type material. Eurybia telephae Boisduval, 1836 was described based on the illustration of a male from Cayenne, French Guiana, based on an unknown number of specimens. To avoid future uncertainty, a male syntype in NMHUK with the following labels is here designated lectotype of Eurybia telephae Boisduval, 1836 : / Type HT / Eurybia telephae, Bdv. (Species Gal, pl. 20, fig. 2) / Telephae . Boisd. Sp. pl. Fig. Cayenne. / EX. MUSAEO Dris. BOISDUVAL / Ex Obertḩr Coll. Brit. Mus. 1927-3. / This type was received in broken condition / 302 / BMNH (E) 1717342 /. The following labels will be added: / LECTOTYPUS / Lectotypus Eurybia telephae Boisduval, 1836 W. Santos, Dolibaina, Dias, O. Mielke & Casagrande des. 2021 /.
Alesa prema f. sapphirina Biedermann, 1936 was described from a female holotype deposited at the MNHN, with the following labels: / HOLOTYPE ♀ Alesa prema f. sapphirina Biedermann, 1936 / Manacapuru Amaz. Mars-34 / Alesa telephae Bsd. ♀ Manacapurú, Amazonas III.1934 Krg. 7. V.35. /.
Distribution. Alesa telephae is widespread in the Amazon basin and the Guianas, recorded in Ecuador (Napo), Peru (Loreto and Madre de Dios), French Guiana and Brazil (Acre, Amazonas and Rondônia) ( Fig. 94 View FIGURES 94 ).
Comments. Although uncommon in collections, this is the most common species of the group. This species was unmistakable until the recent description of A. amethystina and A. humilis , both occurring in French Guiana where A. telephae also occurs. Nevertheless, A. telephae is easily recognized by the presence of red spots on the basal area of the wings upper side, and on the submarginal hindwing (these spots are covered by a violet iridescence in A. amethystina , and faint in A. humilis ).
The female of A. telephae is greatly different in wing, mainly due to the absence of red spots; the hindwing upper side with a row of yellow submarginal ocelli-like spots, and a whitish area between discal and postdiscal bands. The marked sexual dimorphism probably was the reason why Biedermann (1936) recognized and described A. prema f. sapphrina, based on a female specimen, as a different taxon. However, this name is currently correctly recognized as a junior subjective synonym of A. telephae ( Callaghan & Lamas 2004) .
Gallard (2017) mentions that males of this species are sometimes present in large numbers in September disputing and protecting territory, near the summit of a hill in French Guiana. Males are active from 14:00h on, perching on half-shaded leaves about one meter above the ground. Females are uncommon in French Guiana, and only once a female was observed at this site, being immediately pursued by one male. Only three specimens of this species were collected despite intensive field work at the Parque Nacional da Serra do Divisor, Acre, Brazil; a male in early afternoon, at the hilltop, and a male and a female specimen in a trail that goes around the eastern hillsides of the park. This trail passes through several buriti palm ( Mauritia sp. ) swamps, the specimens of A. telephae were collected in one of these swamps at noon.
Examined material. ECUADOR — Napo: Puerto Misahuallí ( Rio Napo), 400m, 7–19.IX.1997, 1 male, Leuschner leg. ( USNM), (8 Km Jatun Sacha), 450m, 15. VI.1988, 1 female, P. J. DeVries leg. ( USNM) . PERU — Loreto: Iquitos , XII.1929, 1 male, no collector, DZ 35.124 ( DZUP) . Yanama , 120m, 24.IX.1995, 1 male, Robbins leg. ( USNM) . Madre de Dios: Pakitza ( Parque Nacional del Manu ), 340m, 14.X.1991, 1 male, 17.X.1991, 1 female, Mielke leg. ( USNM) , 13.X.1991, 1 male, Robbins leg. ( USNM) , 10.IX.1989, 1 female, Harvey leg. ( USNM) . FRENCH GUIANA —no locality, 12.X.1986, 1 macho, 23.X.1988, 1 macho, 18.IX.1988, 1 macho, 15.III.1989, 1 macho, 8.X.1988, 1 macho, 29.XI.1988, 1 macho, 16.VII.1987, 1 macho, Gallard leg. ( USNM) , 16.XII.1990, 1 male, Brévignon leg. ( USNM) , 31.XII.1992, 1 male, Gallard leg. ( USNM) . BRAZIL — Amazonas: Manaus ( Fazenda Dimona , 72 Km ), 9.XII.1993, 1 male, R. Hutchings & J. B. Jullivan leg. ( USNM) . Acre: Mâncio Lima (Parque Nacional da Serra do Divisor, Porç „o Norte ), 200–450m, 23–30.VIII.2014, 1 male and 1 female, Mielke, Casagrande, Carneiro, Dias, Dolibaina, Siewert & Salik leg., DZ 35.114, DZ 35.094 ( DZUP) , 450m, 7–10,13. X.2018, 1 male, O. Mielke, Casagrande, Dolibaina & Medeiros leg., DZ 48.327 ( DZUP) . Santa Rosa do Purus (11.9 Km SE), 13.VIII.2008, 1 male, Mielke & Carneiro leg., DZ 35.134 ( DZUP) .
EX |
The Culture Collection of Extremophilic Fungi |
MNHN |
Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle |
V |
Royal British Columbia Museum - Herbarium |
USNM |
Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History |
VI |
Mykotektet, National Veterinary Institute |
DZUP |
Universidade Federal do Parana, Colecao de Entomologia Pe. Jesus Santiago Moure |
R |
Departamento de Geologia, Universidad de Chile |
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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Tribe |
Eurybiini |
Genus |
Alesa telephae (Boisduval, 1836)
Santos, Wildio Ikaro Da Graça, Dolibaina, Diego Rodrigo, Dias, Fernando Maia Silva, Mielke, Olaf Hermann Hendrik & Casagrande, Mirna Martins 2023 |
Riodinidae
Grote 1895 |
Riodinidae
Grote 1895 |
Riodinidae
Grote 1895 |