Elaphria venustula (Hübner, 1790), Hubner, 1790
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https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.201702 |
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https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6194181 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/B63987D9-FFB6-4640-FF27-9DC8FE1B3E02 |
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Plazi |
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Elaphria venustula (Hübner, 1790) |
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Elaphria venustula (Hübner, 1790) View in CoL
( Figs. 2, 8 View FIGURES 1 – 8 , 10 View FIGURES 9 – 12 , 14 View FIGURES 13 – 17 )
Phalaena Noctua venustula Hübner, 1790 , Beiträge zur Geschichte der Schmetterlinge 2 (3): 78, pl. 3 (4): 7 (Type-locality: Germany: Augsburg).
Synonymy: hybnerana Fabricius, 1794.
References: Hampson 1909: 493, text fig. 138 ( Monodes, Acronyctinae View in CoL ); Warren 1913: 217, fig. 45i ( Psilomonodes View in CoL , Amphipyrinae View in CoL ); Sugi 1982: 1: 821; 2: 384, pl. 197: 69, 68 ( Hapalotis, Acontiinae ); Chen 1982: 250, fig. 1806 ( Monodes View in CoL , Amphipyrinae View in CoL ); Poole 1985: 353 ( Elaphria View in CoL ); Chen, 1999: 769 ( Elaphria View in CoL , Amphipyrinae View in CoL ); Kononenko 1990: 10 ( Hapalotis, Acontiinae ); 2003: 259, figs 1, 2; 2005: 86 ( Elaphria, Acontiinae View in CoL ); 2010:19 ( Elaphria View in CoL , Xyleninae , Elaphriini); Kononenko et al. 1998: 168, fig. 436 ( Elaphria, Acontiinae View in CoL ); Fibiger & Hacker 2007: 62, Pl. 2: 86–93, gen. figs. 27, 171 ( Elaphria View in CoL , Xyleninae , Elaphriini); Kononenko & Han 2007: 101, pl. 109:3, 251:2 ( Elaphria View in CoL , Xyleninae , Elaphriini).
Material examined. 53 specimens from Europe ( France, Hungary, Germany, Denmark), Russia (European part, Ural, West Siberia, Khabarovsk and Primorye terr.), Korea, China, Japan.
Diagnosis. Adult ( Fig. 2 View FIGURES 1 – 8 ). Wingspan 18 – 22 mm. Frons smooth, rounded, labial palps upturned, 3rd segment is about 2 times shorter than 2nd. Head and thorax and ground colour of forewing white, in fresh specimens with rosy hue; wing pattern with rather large patches of blackish-brown; costal area dark, brownish-grey; the most prominent dark patch is the large triangular ventral one in medial area with large distinct black spot; postmedial line white, orbicular missing, reniform blackish; subterminal field greyish, divided by a white patch by apex; subterminal line diffused, blackish, terminal field blackish-brown, terminal line blackish, diffused; fringes dark grey. Hindwing greyish with weakly traceable postmedial line and discal spot. Coremata presents in base of abdomen. In male genitalia ( Fig. 8 View FIGURES 1 – 8 ) uncus relatively stout and short; tegumen broad, with broad penicular lobes; vinculum shorter than tegument, narrow; pleural sclerites plate-like; valva rather long, broader medially; basal half of costa sclerotised, with small traceable digitus; costal margin behind digitus with unsclerotised band; sacculus short, clasper positioned basally, harpe prominent, straight, angled on apical third. Aedeagus short and broad, vesica with large, long, membranous basal diverticulum, bearing large broad-based tapered and pointed cornutus. In female genitalia ( Fig. 14 View FIGURES 13 – 17 ) papillae anales moderate, apophyses anteriores and posteriores thin, almost equal in length; 7th abdominal segment with prominent sclerotised antevaginal crest; ductus bursae rather wide, sclerotised, ribbed; corpus bursae ovoid, constricted medially, with large appendix bursae in caudal part.
Distribution and biology. A Eurasian species, widely distributed in temperate Palaearctic from Europe, northern Middle East, Ural, throughout south Siberia and Kazakhstan to Russian Far East, Mongolia, China, Korea and Japan. A mesophilous species that occurs in open forest, meadows, and forest-steppe. Two generations per year, the moths flying in late May-June and late July-August. Larvae feed on withered plants of Pothentilla, Rubus , Alchemilla , Genista , and Sarothamnus .
Taxonomic note. The systematic position of E. venustula has remained uncertain for a long time. It has been placed by authors in either Amphipyrinae or Acontiinae. Its position was fixed in the tribe Elaphriini of the subfamily Xyleninae by Fibiger & Hacker (2007) (currently the tribe Elaphriini in the subfamily Noctuinae ; Lafontaine & Schmidt 2010).
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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