Dodia, Dyar, 1901

Schmidt, Christian & Macaulay, Douglas, 2009, A new species of Dodia Dyar (Noctuidae, Arctiinae) from central Canada, ZooKeys 9 (9), pp. 79-88 : 80-81

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.9.150

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:04F6D858-CC0A-4C15-B03C-BC9EB1C2A6A5

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3792326

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/AB6F87E9-030E-612B-F8BF-FBD2FBFA7087

treatment provided by

Plazi (2020-04-27 07:18:39, last updated 2024-11-28 00:15:06)

scientific name

Dodia
status

 

Key to North American Dodia species

1 Forewing an even, translucent grey, without transverse bands; width of male valve at midpoint greater than ¼ total length of valve; vesica with two clusters of spines, one at apex and one at base; female corpus bursae slightly constricted medially.................................................................... D. kononenkoi

– Forewing with light and dark transverse bands; width of male valve at midpoint ¼ or less total length of valve; vesica with single apical cluster of spines ( Figs. 6, 7 View Figures 6-7 ); numerous smaller peg-like spinules may also be present ( Fig. 6 View Figures 6-7 ); female corpus bursae oval, wider posteriorly than anteriorly........................ 2

2 Forewing transverse bands meeting posterior margin at right angles; known only from dry, rocky tundra habitat in the Yukon (male unknown) ............. ................................................................................................. D. verticalis

– Forewing transverse bands meeting anal margin at acute angle, running more or less parallel to outer margin; occurring in wet tundra and boreal peat bogs ............................................................................................................ 3

3 Forewing and thorax markings varying from nearly unmarked to moderately contrasting (subapical pale dash always contrasting), but never with basal and antemedial area paler than outer half of wing ( Fig. 1 View Figures 1-2 ); male valve apex with two short, blunt projections ( Fig. 4 View Figure 4 ); juxta wider than long ( Fig. 4a View Figure 4 ); inflated vesica approximately as long as aedeagus ( Fig. 6 View Figures 6-7 )......................... D. albertae

– Forewing and thorax contrastingly marked in mouse grey and whitish-grey banding, with basal and antemedial area noticeably paler than outer half of wing ( Figs. 2 View Figures 1-2 , 3); male valve apex strongly bifurcate, with 2 longer narrower prongs ( Fig. 5 View Figure 5 ); juxta longer than wide ( Fig. 5a View Figure 5 ); inflated vesica 2/3 or less length of aedeagus ( Fig. 7 View Figures 6-7 ) ........................................................ D. tarandus

Gallery Image

Figure 4. Male genitalia of D. albertae, ventral view of genital capsule (a) (Calgary, AB) and variation in valve apex (b – Caribou Mtns, AB; c – Muskox Lake, YT)

Gallery Image

Figure 5. Male genitalia of D. tarandus, ventral view of genital capsule (a) and variation in valve apex (b – Caribou Mtns, AB; c – Harlan, SK).

Gallery Image

Figures 6-7. Aedeagus with inflated vesica of D. albertae (6) and D. tarandus (7).

Gallery Image

Figures 1-2. Adult habitus of Dodia albertae (1) (Ft. McMurray, AB) and D. tarandus holotype (2) (Caribou Mtns, AB).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Lepidoptera

Family

Arctiidae

SubFamily

Arctiinae