Lasionycta luteola

Crabo, Lars & Lafontaine, Donald, 2009, A Revision of Lasionycta Aurivillius (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) for North America and notes on Eurasian species, with descriptions of 17 new species, 6 new subspecies, a new genus, and two new species of Tricholita Grote, ZooKeys 30 (30), pp. 1-156 : 24

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.3897/zookeys.30.308

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:C26E1A82-0DD4-48EF-865C-9D8AA788B739

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3790260

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/75513F41-7B66-FFC1-FF02-EAF3950EFA69

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Lasionycta luteola
status

 

Lasionycta luteola View in CoL species-group

The L. luteola species-group contains only L. luteola (Smith) , a small (forewing length 12–14 mm) alpine species occurring in northwestern North America. It is characterized by the male and female genitalia. Males have an ovate flattened uncus, a strap-like valve with a relatively small cucullus, a straight digitus, and a vesica with a 360° subbasal coil with stout crenulate basal cornuti. Females have a soft pad-like ovipositor covered with long hairs, a relatively long ductus bursae (0.9× corpus bursae), and a strongly constricted bursa copulatrix with slightly smaller appendix bursae than corpus bursae. Th e male antenna is biserrate, approximately 1.8× as wide as the shaft.

The L. luteola species-group is structurally intermediate between the L. mutilata and L. leucocycla species-groups. Th e male uncus and basal vesica cornuti resemble those of the L. mutilata species-group whereas the valve and vesica shapes are more like those of the L. leucocycla species-group. In the female, the pad-like ovipositor is similar to that of the L. mutilata species-group but the cylindrical ductus bursae and smaller corpus bursae are like those of the L. leucocycla species-group.

The L. luteola species-group CO1 sequence differs from those of all other Lasionycta species by more than 2.9 %. Lasionycta luteola is always an isolated species on distance analysis, most often placed near the L. mutilata species-group ( Fig. 247 View Figure 247 ).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Lepidoptera

Family

Noctuidae

Genus

Lasionycta

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