Tambana glauca (Hampson, 1898) Hampson, 1898

Behounek, G., Han, H. L. & Kononenko, V. S., 2015, A revision of the genus Ta mb ana Moore, 1882 with description of eight new species and one subspecies (Lepidoptera, Noctuidae: Pantheinae). Revision of Pantheinae, contribution XIII, Zootaxa 4048 (3), pp. 301-351 : 322-323

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4048.3.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:F2F17A9E-128F-498F-98E3-2BB4EF10F846

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6121628

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/6F338786-8F24-9961-FF69-CD67FB6E9979

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Tambana glauca (Hampson, 1898)
status

comb. nov.

Tambana glauca (Hampson, 1898) comb. n.

( Figs 51–56 View FIGURES 49 – 56 , 69–73 View FIGURES 65 – 88 , 110, 111 View FIGURES 110 – 113 , 129, 130 View FIGURES 124 – 130 )

Trisuloides glauca Hampson, 1897 , Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 11: 455. Type locality: India, Meghalaya, Khasis. Holotype: female, coll. NHM.

Synonymy: Tambana behouneki Speidel & Kononenko, 1998 , syn. n., Esperiana 6: 553, Pl. T: 13, 24. Holotype: male: Vietnam, Mt. Fan-si-Pan, 1700 m, coll. GB/ZSM.

References. Hampson 1913: 354, fig. 91 ( Trisuloides ); Warren 1912: 42, Pl. 4 row d ( Trisuloides ); Speidel & Kononenko 1998; 553, Pl. T: 13, 14, genit. 30 male, 31 female ( Tambana behouneki ); Kononenko & Pinratana 2005: 131, Pl. 38: 11 ( Tambana behouneki ); 2013: 274, Pl. 37: 4, 5 ( Tambana glauca ).

Material examined. Types. Holotype of Trisuloides glauca Hampson : male, [ India] Khasis May 1896 Nat. Coll. / Trisuloides glauca Type male Hmpsn. / Type / genit. prep. Hreblay N 12029 View Materials male/ Noctuidae Brit. Mus. Slide No 15806 male, coll. NHM (examined by photo). Holotype of T. behouneki : Vietnam, male Mt. Fan-si-Pan, 1700 m, slide WS390, coll. GB/ ZSM, paratype: female, VIETNAM, Nord, Prov. Vinh Phu, Tam Dao, 60 km NW Hanoi, 950–1200 m, 23°34′N, 105°20′E, Sinyaev V. & Simonov leg., 1–5.v.1993, slide WS 414 female, coll. WS; Other material examined. VIETNAM: 1 male, Halong, N of Haiphong, 21°14′N, 106°53′E, Krusek K. coll., v.1975, abdomen missing, in coll. WS; THAILAND: 1 male, Prov. Chiang Mai, Doi Phahompok, Mae Ai, 16–20 km NW, 1400–2200 m, 20°116′N, 99°100′E, Ihle T. leg., 19–24.iii.2007, slide GB7407 male, BC ZSM Lep 48884, coll. GB/ ZSM; 1 female, Prov. Chiang Mai, Doi Angkhang, Fang, 1400–1600 m, 20°033′N, 99°100′E, Ihle T. leg., 10.i.2008, slide GB7404 female, BC ZSM Lep 48674, coll. GB/ ZSM; 1 male, Prov. Mae Hong Son, Muang Pai Reservat, 5 km N Pai, 700–800 m, 19°383′N, 98°400′E, Malicky H. leg., 7–23. x.2003, slide GB7423 male BC ZSM Lep 48673, coll. GB/ ZSM; 1 male, Prov. Chiangmai, Doi Phahampot Mt., 3.iv.2000, coll. AP; MYANMAR 1 male, 25 km E Putao, H- 800 m, env. Nan Sa Bon vill., 6.ix.–5.i.1998, S. Murzin & V. Siniaev leg., ex. Coll. V. Siniaev, Coll. A. V. Nekrasov/ ZISP; 6 males, 50 km NW Putao, vic. Wa Sa Dam, 1250 m, 25.v.1998, H- 800 m, vic. Nan Sa Bon vill., 6.ix.–5.i.1998, S. Murzin & V. Siniaev leg., coll. ABR; CHINA: South Yunnan, Shengi, south of Xishuan banna Nature reserve, north of Yunnghong, 22°02′00′′N, 100°31′19′′E, 900–1000 m, 19–27.i.2003, S. Murzin leg. coll. ABR.

Note. The specimens labelled as BC ZSM Lep 48885, BC ZSM Lep 48674 and BC ZSM Lep 48673 have been used for barcoding. Intraspecific variation (n=3) is high, maximum pairwise distance 1,55%. Molecular distance based on the Kimura two-parameter model for COI DNA barcodes between T. glauca and the nearest species T. annamica is 4,77%. Barcode difference between T. glauca and T. indeterminata is 5,28%. T. glauca is not placed on the ID-tree on the same branch as T. annamica and T. indeterminata .

Diagnosis. Adult ( Figs 51–56 View FIGURES 49 – 56 , 69–73 View FIGURES 65 – 88 ). Wingspan 33–36 mm. This and subsequent two species represent a group of closely related species, hardly separable externally as well as by genitalia. Among them T. glauca can be recognized by yellowish-brown with metallic shining ground colour of forewing, greyish dusting in subbasal, medial and subterminal fields, strongly dentate crosslines, contrast border of subterminal line and yellow with brown-grey terminal band hindwing. Head, tegulae and patagia yellowish-white, patagia bordered with black, thorax pale yellowish-white with brown crest; ground colour of forewing yellowish-brown with metallic shining; basal field filled with yellowish-white, basal line marked as black streak; antemedial line black, waved, with thin whitish inner border; medial field yellowish-brown with diffused medial shadow divided for two parts; orbicular as small white dot encircled by black; reniform small, whitish, brown inside, outlined inwardly with black; whitish dash and suffusion lies outside reniform toward to postmedial line and costal margin; postmedial line dentate, bordered outwardly with thin white line; subterminal field rather wide, yellowish-brown, with metallic shining; subterminal line dentate, blackish-brown, diffused inwardly, outlined with white outwardly; subterminal line with prominent whitish spot between two extensions of subterminal line; terminal line as row of black streaks; cilia yellowish-brown, whitish opposite veins. Hindwing with yellow basal part and broad, brownish-grey terminal band; cilia pale grey-brown.

Male genitalia ( Figs 110, 111 View FIGURES 110 – 113 ). Uncus relatively short, thin, curved; tegumen broad, shorter than vinculum, with prominent penicular extensions; vinculum broadly V-shaped; transtilla with broad leave-like lobes; juxta shield-like, broad and high, more or less rounded; valva relatively short, with almost parallel margins, tegumen narrow, elongate, in apical third ventral margin of valva gradually constricted distally, apex rounded; harpe lies in distal third of valva, almost straight, relatively short. Aedeagus relatively short, extended distally, thick; carina sclerotised; vesica broadly-tubular, rather short, bearing large basal diverticulum covered with field of small spines and large apical diverticulum with two patches of small dense cornuti.

Female genitalia ( Figs 129, 130 View FIGURES 124 – 130 ). Ovipositor quadrangular, papillae anales rather broad; anterior and posterior apophyses short, broad, equal in length; antrum broadly-triangular, weakly sclerotised, ductus bursae long, very short, membranous; corpus bursae rounded, sclerotised and ribbed in caudal part in joining with ductus bursae.

Distribution and bionomy. North India (Meghalaya); * China (South Yunnan); North Vietnam (Lao Cai, Tonkin), North Myanmar (Putao); North Thailand (Chiang Mai). The species occurs in secondary and primary forest at elevation 800–1500 m. Moth flies in January, March, April, May, June and October.

ZSM

Bavarian State Collection of Zoology

ZISP

Zoological Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences

COI

University of Coimbra Botany Department

DNA

Department of Natural Resources, Environment, The Arts and Sport

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Lepidoptera

Family

Pantheidae

Genus

Tambana

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