Published August 11, 2023 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Phaselia joestleinae Hausmann 1996

Description

Phaselia joestleinae Hausmann, 1996

(Figs 56–58, 107–108, 142–143, 144, 145).

Phaselia joestleinae Hausmann, 1996. Spixiana Supplement 22: 6, figs 3,4,9,11. Holotype ♁ (SNSB/ZSM), ([Turkey], Adana).

Type material examined.

Holotype, ♁, “[Turkey], Adana, Asm. v.[19]55, [leg.] G. Friedel ”, g. prep. 5214 (in SNSB / ZSM).

Paratypes 2 ♀♀, same data as holotype, g. preps 5215, G8560 (in SNSB / ZSM).

Paratypes 2 ♁♁, 1 ♀, same data as holotype, g. prep. (♁) 1995 – 247 M. Sommerer (in PCMS).

Additional material examined. 2 ♁♁, 1 ♀ (see the complete list in the appendix).

Re-description. Wingspan. Males: around 31 mm (holotype), females: 32–35 mm.

Forewing. Ground colour warm white with smooth light brownish pattern; basal area and postmedial area darker than medial area; antemedial line dark brown to black, irregularly zigzagged with rounded to acute tips, costal tooth reduced to a curve; medial line present as a diffuse darker brown shadow close to postmedial line; postmedial line thin, dark brown, slightly curved inwards on costal area; subterminal line light to dark brown and interrupted in the middle, serrate with weakly pronounced triangular spikes, distally accompanied by a white shadow; terminal line thin, dark brown, wavy; fringes white and brown, dark at the end of the veins.

Hindwing. Ground colour white, speckled with brown towards terminal area; postmedial line brown, medially projected outwards; sometimes interrupted or even invisible; subterminal line barely visible as a light shadow.

Discal spots usually visible as brown, short streaks or tiny dots on all wings, sometimes faded. Fringes in all wings white and brown, dark at the end of the veins. Ventral side generally paler than dorsal side, pattern of upper side shines through the wings, visible as a shadow (figs 56–58).

Male genitalia. Uncus triangular, tip incurved; gnathos well-sclerotized, medially not fused; valva trapezoidal; costal part of valva slightly sclerotized, distally finger-shaped, extended over the apex of valvula; sacculus slightly oval, smoothly transitioning to valvula; ventral margin without or with very fine and small spines, equally distributed on the sacculus; juxta formed as two ovals, fused in the upper half; saccus wide, triangular, terminally curved. Aedeagus short, straight or slightly curved; vesica with one very long and straight, well-sclerotized cornutus and a claw-like curved cornutus, the spined plate-like cornutus strongly reduced or absent (figs 107–108).

Female genitalia. Ovipositor large and wide; apophyses posteriores three times longer than apophyses anteriores; lamella antevaginalis evenly sclerotized throughout its width; ductus bursae inconspicuous and narrow; corpus bursae membranous, ornamented with a small but well-sclerotized, round, stellate signum (figs 142–143).

Diagnosis. Phaselia joestleinae can be confused only with P. phaeoleucaria stat. rev., P. smettboi sp. nov. and P. deliciosaria.

For differentiation, see the diagnosis of the respective species above.

Phenology. Possibly univoltine. Investigated specimens have been collected in May. Biology. Unknown. Habitat. Investigated specimens have been collected at an altitude of 420 m (Turkey). Distribution. South Turkey and Southwest Turkey (László et al., 2018) (fig. 144). DNA barcoding. Genetic distances from morphologically most similar species: Phaselia deliciosaria (7.94%), P. sp. cf. deliciosaria (6.92%). Genetically closest species: P. sp. cf. deliciosaria (6.92 %) and P. erika jonubi ssp. nov. (7.58 %) (fig. 145, Tab. 1).

Complete checklist of the species of the genus Phaselia with taxonomic changes in this paper

The nomenclatural and/or distribution data is complemented also by literature (Viidalepp 1996, Scoble 1999, László et al. 2018, Müller et al. 2019, Rajaei et al. 2022).

Phaselia serrularia (Eversmann, 1847) (Southern Federal District of Russia, Northeast to South Kazakhstan, East Usbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, East Turkmenistan, West Mongolia)

Phaselia narynaria syn. nov. Oberthür, 1913

Phaselia pithana bona sp. Wehrli, 1941 ( Northeast Iran, Turkmenistan, Southwest Kazakhstan, Northwest Afghanistan)

Phaselia phaeoleucaria phaeoleucaria stat. rev. (Lederer, 1855) (East and Central Kazakhstan)

Phaselia phaeoleucaria shurensis comb. nov. Wehrli, 1941 (Southeast Turkey, Georgia, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Northwest to Central Iran, Southwest Russia (Dagestan))

Phaselia catharia syn. nov. Wehrli, 1941

Phaselia smettboi sp. nov. (North to Northeast Turkey, Southwest Russia in South Ural Mountains)

Phaselia erika erika Ebert, 1965 (Southeast Afghanistan, Central Pakistan)

Phaselia erika jonubi ssp. nov. (Central to Southeast Iran, North Oman)

Phaselia erika sindhi ssp. nov. (Southeast Pakistan)

Phaselia sihvoneni sp. nov. (Central Tajikistan, Northeast Pakistan and North India)

Phaselia kasyi Wiltshire, 1966 (Afghanistan)

Phaselia deliciosaria (Lederer, 1855) (South Turkey, Syria, Lebanon, Israel, Jordan, Saudi-Arabia, Northeast Oman)

Phaselia joestleinae Hausmann, 1996 (South Turkey)

Phaselia algiricaria Oberthür, 1913 (Algeria, Spain, Morocco)

Phaselia algiricaria relicta Turati, 1930 (Tunisia, Libya)

Phaselia algiricaria gigantaria Schwingenschuss, 1936 (Morocco)

Phaselia algiricaria aragona Wehrli, 1941 (East Spain)

Phaselia phoeniciaria (Turati & Krüger, 1936) (Libya) (see note below)

Note. Boarmia phoeniciaria Turati & Krüger, 1936 was redescribed by Wehrli (1954, p. 454) as Hemerophila phoeniciaria. The latter genus name Hemerophila Stephens, 1829 is considered to be a synonym of Menophra Moore, [1887] because of homonymy with Hemerophila Hübner, 1817 (Choreutidae). This taxon has been treated as Phaselia phoeniciaria (Turati & Krüger, 1936) by several other authors (Scoble 1999; Scoble and Hausmann 2007; Hausmann and Sihvonen 2019; Rajaei et al. 2022).

Notes

Published as part of Werner, Maria Johanna, Hausmann, Axel, Kostjuk, Igor, Wanke, Dominic & Rajaei, Hossein, 2023, Integrative taxonomic revision of the genus Phaselia Guenée, [1858] (Geometridae: Ennominae) in the Middle East and Central Asia, pp. 1-66 in Zootaxa 5326 (1) on pages 25-27, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5326.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/8243811

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Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

Collection code
PCMS , SNSB, ZSM
Family
Geometridae
Genus
Phaselia
Kingdom
Animalia
Order
Lepidoptera
Phylum
Arthropoda
Scientific name authorship
Hausmann
Species
joestleinae
Taxon rank
species
Type status
holotype , paratype
Taxonomic concept label
Phaselia joestleinae Hausmann, 1996 sec. Werner, Hausmann, Kostjuk, Wanke & Rajaei, 2023

References

  • Hausmann, A. (1996) Two new geometrid species from the Middle East (Insecta, Lepidoptera, Geometridae). Spixiana, 22, 3 - 10.
  • Laszlo, G. M., Lodl, M., Gaal-Haszler, S., Galsworthy, A., Ronkay, G., Ronkay, L., & Varga, Z. (2018) The Vartian Collection Part IV. Geometridae. Fibigeriana. Vol. 4. Heterocera Press, Budapest, pp. 1 - 166.
  • Viidalepp, J. (1996) Check List of the Geometridae of the Former USSR. Apollo Books, Stenstrup, 111 pp.
  • Scoble, M. J. (1999) Geometrid Moths of the World: A Catalogue (Lepidoptera, Geometridae). Vols. 1 & 2. CSIRO Publishing, Collingwood, Victoria and Apollo Books, Stenstrup, 1200 pp. https: // doi. org / 10.1071 / 9780643101050
  • Muller, B., Erlacher, S., Hausmann, A., Rajaei, H., Shivonen, P. & Skou, P. (2019) Subfamily Ennominae II. In: Hausmann, A., Rajaei, H., Shivonen, P. & Skou, P. (Eds.), The Geometrid Moths of Europe. Vol. 6. Brill Leiden, Boston, pp. 1 - 906. https: // doi. org / 10.1163 / 9789004387485
  • Rajaei, H., Hausmann, A., Scoble, M., Wanke, D., Plotkin, D., Brehm, G., Murillo-Ramos, L. & Sihvonen, P. (2022) An online taxonomic facility of Geometridae (Lepidoptera), with an overview of global species richness and systematics. Integrative Systematics, 5 (2), 145 - 192. https: // doi. org / 10.18476 / 2022.577933
  • Eversmann, E. (1847) Lepidoptera Quaedam nova Rossiae et Siberiae Indigena descripsit et delineavit. Bulletin de la Societe Imperiale des Naturalistes de Moscou, 20 (2), 66 - 83.
  • Oberthur, C. (1913) Etudes de lepidopterologie comparee, 4. Imprimerie Oberthur, Rennes, 691 pp.
  • Lederer, J. (1855) Weiterer Beitrag zur Schmetterlings-Fauna des Altaigebirges in Sibirien. Verhandlungen des Zoologisch-Botanischen Vereins in Wien, 5, 97 - 120.
  • Ebert, G. (1965) Afghanische Geometriden (Lep.) I. Stuttgarter Beitrage zur Naturkunde, 142, 1 - 32.
  • Wiltshire, E. P. (1966) Osterreichische entomologische Iran-Afghanistan-Expeditionen, Beitrage zur Lepidopterenfauna, Teil 10, Subfamilien Larentiinae und Ennominae (sensu lato) (Lepidoptera, Geometridae). Middle East Lepidoptera XXIII. Zeitschrift der Wiener Entomologischen Gesellschaft, 51, 144 - 152.
  • Turati, E. (1930) Atti della Societa italiana di scienze naturali. Museo Civico di Storia Naturale Milano, 69, 94, pl. 2.
  • Schwingenschuss, L. (1936) s. n. In: Zerny, H. & Schwingenschuss, L. (Eds.), Die Lepidopterenfauna des Grossen Atlas in Marokko und seiner Randgebiete. Memoire Societe Science natutalia Physica Marocco, 42, pp. 87.
  • Turati, E. & Kruger, G. (1936) Contributi alla fauna cirenaica. Novita di Lepidotterologia. Memoire della Societa Entomologia Italiana, 15 (1), 72, pl. 11, fig. 17, (Boarmia)
  • Scoble, M. J. & Hausmann, A. (2007) Online list of valid and available names of the Geometridae of the World. Updated. Available from: http: // www. herbulot. de / globalspecieslist. htm (accessed 30 July 2022)
  • Hausmann, A. & Sihvonen, P. (2019) Revised, annotated systematic checklist of the Geometridae of Europe and adjuscent areas. Vols. 1 - 6. In: Hausmann, A., Rajaei, H., Shivonen, P. & Skou, P. (Eds.), The Geometrid Moths of Europe. Vol 6. Brill Leiden and Boston, pp. 795 - 871. https: // doi. org / 10.1163 / 9789004387485 _ 001