Tetracis australis Ferris

Ferris, Clifford D. & Schmidt, Christian, 2010, Revision of the North American Genera Tetracis Guenée and Synonymization of Synaxis Hulst with Descriptions of Three New Species (Lepidoptera: Geometridae: Ennominae), Zootaxa 2347, pp. 1-36 : 13

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.275566

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6209051

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03BF6D3A-FFF9-DF76-68C4-14DCFBE1FF11

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Tetracis australis Ferris
status

sp. nov.

Tetracis australis Ferris , New Species

( Figs. 9 View FIGURES 3 – 11 , 24–26 View FIGURES 12 – 26 , 90 View FIGURES 87 – 94 , 105 View FIGURES 102 – 117 , 121 View FIGURES 118 – 124 , 136 View FIGURES 135 – 136 )

Diagnosis: The nearly straight DFW PM line, fawn color, and early-season flight period (February–June; stragglers to mid-July) separate australis from its congeners except cervinaria . Genitalic characters (male genitalia: length of furca nearly as long as aedeagus, ratio ca. 0.9; ca. 0.7 in cervinaria ; valves longer and narrower than in cervinaria ) and geography (coastal southern California to Baja California) separate australis from cervinaria . Some males of australis have a slightly ruddy aspect not usually seen in cervinaria , but this is not a reliable character for species separation. The ventral maculation of australis is paler and more diffuse than in cervinaria .

Description: Adults ( Figs. 9 View FIGURES 3 – 11 , 24–26 View FIGURES 12 – 26 ): FWL: 19–23 mm. External morphology as for cervinaria . Male genitalia ( Figs. 90 View FIGURES 87 – 94 , 105 View FIGURES 102 – 117 ): Uncus slightly decurved, basally broad tapering to rounded apex. Gnathos typically with 2 or 3 robust upcuved spines projecting from opposite ends of dorso-caudal margin. Slender robust furca from middle of anellus tapers to rounded apex, expanding slightly before apex, length of furca almost as long as aedeagus, ratio ca. 0.9. Valve basally broad with even margins, tapering to rounded apex lacking an apical projection. Aedeagus with lightly sclerotized projection at posterior end, but without ring of spinules at base of vesica; everted vesica with well-defined dome; ribbon-like lightly setose sclerotized plate at base of vesica; small irregularly-shaped slightly setose sclerotized plate and scattered small sclerotized nodules on dome. Female genitalia ( Fig. 121 View FIGURES 118 – 124 ): A/P = 0.4. Tubular ductus bursae moderately long, linearly sclerotized, expanding slightly before joining corpus bursae; corpus bursae plum-shaped with pointed fundus, slightly shorter than length of ductus bursae; large oval and strongly dentate signum below junction with ductus bursae.

Type material. Holotype ♂: CALIFORNIA, Santa Barbara Co., 3 mi. N. Refugio Beach, 20 June, 1965, (no collector) [ UCB, Berkeley, California]. Paratypes: 27 ♂, 19 ♀) CALIFORNIA: Los Angeles Co., Carnavon Way, Los Angeles, 17 April, 1983 (1 ♀), 4–21 May, 1983, F. P. Sala (3 ♂),, Buckham Camp, Angeles Crest, 7000’, 9 June, 1952, F. P. Sala (1 ♀); Monterey Co., Big Creek Reserve (UC NRS), 5/ 8 June, 1989, Y-F Hsu & J. Powell (3 ♂), 5/6–27/29 April, 1990 Y. F. Hsu & J. Powell (4 ♂, 7 ♀), 3/5–14/16 June, 1991, Y. F. Hsu & J. A. Powell (2 ♀), 2/ 4 May, 1992, C. A. Geiger (1 ♂, 1 ♀) 12/13–23/24 May, 1992, J. Powell & Scaccia (3 ♂), 7/ 9 June, 1993, Y. F. Hsu & J. A. Powell (1 ♀), 25/26 April, 1997, J. Powell & J. Kruse (1 ♀); San Luis Obispo Co., 3 mi. W. Paso Robles, 28 April, 1968, J. A. Powell & P. A. Opler (4 ♂, 2 ♀), 2 mi. W. Paso Robles, 28 April, 1968, J. Powell (1 ♂), 7 mi. E. Morro Bay, 23 June, 1965, J. S. Buckett (1 ♂), 3 mi. S. Atascadero, 26 April, 1968, P. A. Opler (1 ♂), Pozo, 1 May, 1962, R. L. Langston (1 ♂); Santa Barbara Co., Mission Cyn., Santa Barbara, 2 March, 1987, J. Powell (1 ♂), 3 mi. N. Refugio Beach, 20 June, 1965, J. Powell (1 ♂), 24 June, 1965 J. Powell (1♀); Ventura Co., Cherry Ck., 6 mi. E. Pine Mtn. Summit, 25 May, 1984, J. Powell & DeBenedictis (1 ♂, 1 ♀). MEXICO, Baja California Norte, Los Encinos, San Pedro Martir, 6000’, 2 June, 1958, J. Powell (1 ♂, 1 ♀). Paratypes deposited in EME and CDF.

Material examined: Additional material was examined that is not included in the type series.

Etymology. The adjectival name australis reflects the southern geographic distribution of this species.

Biology: Incompletely known. In pine-oak-manzanita habitat. McFarland (1965, as cervinaria ) cited larval hosts as Quercus and Populus in the Santa Monica Mts., Los Angeles Co., California. Adults from March to late June.

Distribution ( Fig. 136 View FIGURES 135 – 136 ): Coastal southern Caifornia from Monterey Co. south to Los Encinas, San Pedro Martir, Baja California Norte, Mexico at elevations from near sea level to 7000’ (2135m). Records by state/ county are: UNITED STATES: CALIFORNIA. Los Angeles, Monterey, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, San Diego, San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara. MEXICO: Baja Caifornia Norte.

UCB

University of California at Berkeley

NRS

Naturhistoriska Riksmuseet

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Lepidoptera

Family

Geometridae

SubFamily

Ennominae

Genus

Tetracis

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