Pollanisus subdolosa subdolosa (Walker, 1865)
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5281.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:6ABDFD26-7900-41EA-91AD-8CA3B8552F40 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7921749 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038BFF67-FFA6-FFAC-FF6F-5F7CABA868D4 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Pollanisus subdolosa subdolosa |
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Pollanisus subdolosa subdolosa View in CoL — P. subdolosa clara
Published data ( Tarmann 2004) and an additional new locality.
Material examined. Pollanisus subdolosa clara ( Table 9). Paratype, 1 ♁ ( Figs 128, 130 View FIGURES 128–132 ), New South Wales. Minyon Falls , 6 km N of Rosebank, 28° 22’ 12”S, 153° 13’ 48”E, 19.XI.1976, I. F. B. Common & E. D. Edwards leg. ( ANIC). GoogleMaps Queensland. 1 ♁ (1436) ( Figs 129, 131 View FIGURES 128–132 ) 4 ♁, Burrum Coast N. P., Point Campground , 25°03′S, 152°31′E, 23/ 24. IV.2008, S. & B. Mollet leg. ( BMC) GoogleMaps .
Discussion and diagnosis. Differences in the habitus of the two subspecies are: hindwing opaque in P. s. subdolosa and translucent in P. s. clara but their head features are similar ( Tarmann 2004). Unfortunately, no P. s. subdolosa was examined in ANIC for head ratio comparison with P. s. clara. Until there is more investigation of accurate measurement of head ratios in P. s. subdolosa , the status of the two subspecies is maintained. P. s. subdolosa is similar in habitus to P. edwardsi and P. species 2, but the frons is larger and the eyes smaller in the latter. P. s. clara is very similar in habitus to P. contrastus , P. yugambeh sp. n. and P. trimacula (without spots), but in this last their frons is larger and the eyes smaller. Without careful examination of the head ratios, many male specimens, examined in several museums, cannot be clearly assigned ( Tarmann 2004).
Phenology and bionomics. Males of P. s. subdolosa and P. s. clara were mainly collected at night ( Tarmann 2004). A large series of males of P. s. clara were collected at U. V. light early in the morning ( Tarmann 2004). This behavior, linked to an intermediate value of the head ratio data between the diurnal and the nocturnal species ( Tables 17 View TABLE 17 , 19), suggests crepuscular activity. Hibbertia scandens (Dilleniaceae) is supposed to be the larval host-plant of P. s. clara ( Tarmann 2004). P. s. subdolosa is localized in Victoria while P. s. clara occurs in New South Wales and south of Queensland. The host-plant of P. s. subdolosa is unknown but should be different than H. scandens , which is not known in the countryside in Victoria, (ALA).
ANIC |
Australian National Insect Collection |
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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