Tecmessa
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and
Americerura
Tecmessa
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contains the type species
Thosea annulipes Berg, 1878
from Argentina (later moved to
Tecmessa
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by Burmeister (1878)) and
Tecmessa elegans
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from southeastern Brazil ( Berg 1878, Burmeister 1878, Schaus 1901).
Tecmessa annulipes
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and
T. elegans
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are both similar in patterning to cerurines and have simple genitalia, superficially similar to those of some cerurine genera (e.g.,
Cerura
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), see Figs. 8
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and 9
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. Schintlmeister (2013), in his comprehensive checklist of global
Notodontidae
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and
Oenosandridae
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, transferred all American representatives placed in
Cerura
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since the time of Draudt (1932) to
Tecmessa
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based on these superficial similarities. This classification was followed by Becker (2014) and Miller et al. (2018). However, the transfer of species from Old World endemic
Cerura
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to
Tecmessa
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by Schintlmeister (2013) was erroneous, although these species do not belong in
Cerura
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either. Morphologically, true
Tecmessa
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display the following characters not shared with
Cerurinae
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: narrowly pectinate (not plumose) antennae and somewhat developed ‘beard tufts’ below the haustellum, the latter of which is a derived condition of
Heterocampinae ( Miller et al. 2018)
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. We also note the strong similarity of
Tecmessa
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genitalia (see revised genus diagnosis below) to some
Heterocampinae
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genera, such as
Coelodasys Packard ( Miller et al. 2021)
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. The caterpillar morphology ( Fig. 10
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) and behavior, which are known for both
T. annulipes
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and
T. elegans
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, are also highly distinct from those of
Cerurinae
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. The caterpillars of these two species lack the main larval apomorphies of
Cerurinae
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, namely stemapods and enlarged thoracic segments ( Berg 1878, Oleiro et al. 2011, St Laurent pers. obs., Wheeler pers. comm.); and both feed on
Anacardiaceae
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, not
Salicaceae
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as is typical of
Cerurinae
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( Biezanko et al. 1974, Oleiro et al. 2011). We also note that these two species have gregarious caterpillars, whereas those of
Cerurinae
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are nearly always solitary in all stages, except for the aposematic caterpillars of
Cerurina
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( Mulvaney 2021, St Laurent pers. obs.).
We transfer
Tecmessa
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from
Cerurinae
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to
Heterocampinae
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based on our phylogenetic results ( Figs. S1–4
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) and the characters considered apomorphic for
Heterocampinae
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and
Cerurinae
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by Miller et al. (2018). Two additional taxa, following our examination, are also included in
Tecmessa
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on the basis of genitalia and external morphology: the monotypic genus
Corania Schaus, 1939
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, syn. nov., assigned to
Cerurinae
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in Becker (2014), is hereby synonymized with
Tecmessa
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:
Tecmessa pedrana
comb. nov. (TL: Argentina).
Tecmessa pica
(TL: Chile), which was already transferred to
Tecmessa
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by Becker (2014), is highly similar morphologically to
T. pedrana
and the genitalia of the two species are nearly identical (compare Fig. 9C and D
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). Although DNA extraction of these two species failed to provide enough DNA for AHE sequencing, the genitalia provide sufficient evidence for the placement of
T. pedrana
in
Tecmessa
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and maintenance of Becker’s (2014) assignment of
T. pica
to
Tecmessa
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. Furthermore, among the series of
T. pica
, we found specimens intermediate in coloration and patterning between
T. pica
and
T. pedrana
, suggesting a close relationship between these two species. So far as is known, true
Tecmessa
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under this concept of the genus are endemic to South America, inhabiting Brazilian Atlantic Forest, grasslands in Brazil and Uruguay, arid regions of Argentina, and Chilean mountain ranges. Habitus and male genitalia of all known true
Tecmessa
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are shown in Figs. 8
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and 9
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, and caterpillars of two species in Fig. 10
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. The two generic synonyms listed under
Tecmessa
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in Becker (2014),
Eucerura Schaus, 1901
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and
Eunaduna Dognin, 1901
, remain synonyms of
Tecmessa
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because the type species of both were examined and determined to be
Tecmessa species.
Namely, the type of
Eucerura
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,
Drymonia pica Butler, 1882
, is
Tecmessa pica
and the type of
Eunaduna
,
Eunaduna cerurata Dognin, 1901
, is a synonym of
Tecmessa annulipes
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.
Three other species transferred to
Tecmessa
by Schintlmeister (2013) belong neither in
Cerurinae
nor in
Tecmessa
, but to another as yet unnamed heterocampine genus. These species,
T. olindata ( Schaus, 1939)
,
T. gonema ( Schaus, 1905)
, and
T. laqueata ( Schaus, 1911)
are each very similar to one another but together are divergent in morphology ( Figs. 8E, F
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, 9E
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) and phylogenetically ( Figs. S1–4
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) from true
Tecmessa
. Only
T. gonema
is included in our analyses, but external and genitalia morphology of these three species are nearly identical. They differ greatly from
Cerurinae
and from
Tecmessa
s.s. in that they bear cteniophores, a widespread trait in
Heterocampinae
which is absent in
Cerurinae
( Miller et al. 2018) and
Tecmessa
s.s. Maintaining our focus on
Cerurinae
, we do not formally transfer these taxa from
Tecmessa
at this time, but they will require a new genus to maintain monophyly of
Tecmessa
and this is the topic of a future work (St Laurent et al. in review).
Below we describe a new genus to accommodate the cerurine contingent of species formally assigned to
Tecmessa
s.l. and transfer them accordingly. Adult habitus and male genitalia are shown for all of the transferred species in Figs. 11–13
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. Description of
Americerura
gen. nov. ensures that all genera in
Cerurinae
, and the subfamily itself, are monophyletic. Miller et al. (2018) provide a detailed description of ‘
Tecmessa
’ consisting of the North American species of
Americerura
, thus we provide a new description here taking into consideration all Neotropical species and excluding the species now established as heterocampines.