Cosmosatyrus leptoneuroides subsp. leptoneuroides C. Felder & R. Felder 1867

Cosmosatyrus leptoneuroides leptoneuroides C. Felder & R. Felder, 1867 (Figs. 4 D–F; 13 G–I; 24) Lectotype: (male) BMNH # 809617 (Specimen examined) Paralectotype: (male) BMNH # 809616 (Specimen examined) Type location: Chile = Satyrus morania Berg, 1877 a Lectotype: (male) MACN, Buenos Aires (P...

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Main Authors: Matz, Jess, Brower, Andrew V. Z.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2016
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6070010
https://zenodo.org/record/6070010
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6070010
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
topic Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Insecta
Lepidoptera
Nymphalidae
Cosmosatyrus
Cosmosatyrus leptoneuroides
Cosmosatyrus leptoneuroides leptoneuroides c. felder & r. felder, 1867
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Insecta
Lepidoptera
Nymphalidae
Cosmosatyrus
Cosmosatyrus leptoneuroides
Cosmosatyrus leptoneuroides leptoneuroides c. felder & r. felder, 1867
Matz, Jess
Brower, Andrew V. Z.
Cosmosatyrus leptoneuroides subsp. leptoneuroides C. Felder & R. Felder 1867
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Insecta
Lepidoptera
Nymphalidae
Cosmosatyrus
Cosmosatyrus leptoneuroides
Cosmosatyrus leptoneuroides leptoneuroides c. felder & r. felder, 1867
description Cosmosatyrus leptoneuroides leptoneuroides C. Felder & R. Felder, 1867 (Figs. 4 D–F; 13 G–I; 24) Lectotype: (male) BMNH # 809617 (Specimen examined) Paralectotype: (male) BMNH # 809616 (Specimen examined) Type location: Chile = Satyrus morania Berg, 1877 a Lectotype: (male) MACN, Buenos Aires (Photo examined) Type location: Santa Cruz Province, Argentina = Erebia plumbeola var. duseni Staudinger, 1899 Holotype: (female) MFN, Berlin (Photo examined) Type location: P. Dusén, Rio Aysén, Aysén Province, Chile = Cosmosatyrus statia Weymer, 1911 Type: no type Type location: Chile Subspecies: Cosmosatyrus leptoneuroides plumbeola (Butler, 1868) ( Tetraphlebia? ) Holotype: (male) BMNH # 809624 (Specimen examined) Type location: Puerto Hambre, Magallanes Province, Chile = Satyrus antarctia Reed, 1877 Holotype by indication (ICZN Art. 12.2.7): Plate II fig. 4 in Reed (1877) Distribution . Found in Chile from the coast of central Coquimbo Province, south to the Strait of Magellan and in Argentina, in northern Neuquén Province and on the islands of the Paraná Delta north of Buenos Aires from November to March at nearly sea level to 3800m (Fig. 24). Diagnosis . Easily distinguished from other Neosatyriti by distinct patterning on the VHW (Fig. 4 D–F). Postmedian band with the proximal edge daffodil yellow that fades to chocolate brown and bearing an ocellus in each cell between Rs and CuA 2. Ocelli between Rs-M 1, M 1 -M 2, and CuA 1 -CuA 2 are round, black, unipupillate, and ringed in daffodil yellow, the Rs-M 1 ocellus being the smaller of these. Ocelli between M 2 -M 3 and M 3 -CuA 1 are round, white, and may be ringed in daffodil yellow. Hindwing veins are highlighted in white, more strongly so at the proximal edge of the postmedian band. Ventral side of the forewing bears a patch covering the discal cell to the proximal edge of the postmedian band that may be orange, rust orange, rust red, or peach, depending on the region from which the specimen was collected. Apical ocellus on the ventral side of the hindwing varies from a small, unipupillate black spot ringed in daffodil yellow that is confined within M 1 -M 2 to a large bipupillate black ocellus ringed in daffodil yellow that spans across M 1 -M 3. Specimens from Magallanes Province, Chile, may entirely lack this ocellus. Foreleg tarsi unsegmented in both sexes, but female tarsi may be constricted near the distal end, having the appearance of segmentation without being articulated. Redescription. Head: Antennae 7–10mm with white to cream scales and a longitudinal stripe of chocolate brown scales that covers half of a spatulate club. Eyes round and naked, length approximately 1.2 times width. Palps with a longitudinal white to cream stripe along the median with the dorsal side piliform scales chocolate brown and the ventral side with black, tan, and chocolate piliform scales and white to cream piliform scales included toward the base. Males with the terminal segment entirely chocolate to dark chocolate brown and females with white scales that continue the longitudinal white stripe from the second segment. Terminal palp segment cylindrical and a little more than one-third the length of the second segment. Thorax sepia with iridescent black scales and covered in chocolate and cream piliform scales. Females similar, but with cream to white scales in addition to the iridescent black. Abdomen cream ventrally and chocolate to dark chocolate brown dorsally. Foreleg tarsi unsegmented and clublike in the males, the female tarsi a little longer and sometimes having the appearance of segmentation approximately where the first tarsal segment would be. This pseudo-segmentation appears as a slight constriction or line that circumscribes the tarsus. Forewing (Fig. 4 D–F): Wingspan 28–35mm. Termen nearly straight or slightly convex and the distal end of the discal cell sinuous, the costal half more deeply curved than the cubital half. Males with androconial scales that extend in triangular patches from M 1 to 1 A+ 2 A and into the discal cell near M 2. Dorsal side chocolate to dark chocolate brown with fringe scales of the same color. Females slightly lighter than the males with fringe scales lighter than wing color. Ventral side with a patch that extends from the discal cell to the post median band in rust red, orange, rust orange, or peach. Color of this patch may be a regional variance. Costa, inner margin, and postmedian band to the termen are chocolate to dark chocolate brown, the termen sometimes edged in white and the postmedian band outlined in dark coffee. Apical ocellus may appear as a unipupillate round black spot ringed in daffodil yellow between M 1 -M 2, as a bipupillate black spot ringed in daffodil yellow that extends from M 1 -M 3, or as two separate ocelli that may begin to fuse at M 2. Specimens from Magallanes province in Chile may be entirely without this ocellus. A whitish patch is sometimes visible where the radial veins meet the costa. Hindwing (Fig. 4 D–F): Wing oval, termen slightly convex and barely scalloped with the inner margin excavated between the anal vein and 1 A+ 2 A. Dorsal side similar in color to the forewing, sometimes with patches of rust red along the most distal edge of the postmedian band. Long piliform scales appearing on both sexes at the base and over the discal cell, extending to the median. Ventral side chocolate brown with a ripple pattern of dark chocolate to dark coffee striations that extends from the base to the postmedian band and a sinuous submedian line in dark chocolate to dark coffee. Both edges of the postmedian band scalloped, the proximal edge more so than the distal edge, and outlined in dark chocolate to dark coffee. Postmedian band chocolate brown with the proximal edge daffodil to maize yellow. Black ocelli ringed in yellow, sometimes unipupillate, appear between Rs-M 1, M 1 - M 2, and CuA 1 -CuA 2. The first of these slightly smaller than the other two. A round white ocellus, sometimes ringed in yellow, appears between M 2 -M 3 and M 3 -CuA 1. Veins are highlighted in white. Male genitalia (Fig. 13 G–I): Uncus widest at the base, narrowing gradually to a blunt finger-like terminus, and approximately twice as long as the tegumen. Gnathos acute and a little more than half the length of the uncus. Pedunculus long and U-shaped. Saccus U-shaped and one-third the length of the gnathos. Valvae narrow at the proximal end, more than doubling in width at the proximal one-third and gradually narrowing toward the distal end. Distal one-third widens dorsally then attenuates abruptly at the distal one-fourth to a finger-like terminus. Aedeagus nearly even in width throughout, slightly wider at the median, and with an acute proximal end. Remarks . Specimen (male) BMNH # 809617 is newly designated as the lectotype for C. leptoneuroides , none having previously been designated from the syntype series. The paralectotype is identical but for a minor difference in the strength of the yellow median border of the postmedian band. With a few notable exceptions, the wing patterning of C. leptoneuriodes is fairly uniform across its geographical range, which extends from Coquimbo Province 300km north of Santiago, Chile, to the Straits of Magellan in the far south. Cosmosatyrus statia , from the illustration in Weymer (1911), appears in every respect to agree with the C. leptoneuroides leptoneuroides type, but without the Rs-M 1, M 2 -M 3, and M 3 -CuA 1 ocelli. Cosmosatyrus leptoneuroides plumbeola is the name applied to the southernmost examples of the species. There is no evidence of a contiguous range, leaving this subspecies apparently isolated from the nominal subspecies. Relative to the nominate form, C. leptoneuroides plumbeola tends to be smaller, darker, and with a more reduced M 1 -M 3 ocellus on the ventral side of the forewing. Curiously, a few specimens from near Cerro Castillo (51 º 14 ’ 28 ”S, 71 º 23 ’ 52 ”W) and Puerto Prat (51 º 38 ’S, 72 º 38 ’W) that completely lack the M 1 -M 3 ventral side forewing ocellus. Specimens examined. C. leptoneuroides leptoneuroides Chile, Bío-Bío Province, (MTSU) CH 15 - 5 - CH 15 - 7, CH 16 - 2, CH 24 A- 4, CL0201, CL0313, CL0315, CL0424, (UJ) 3 males, 4 females; Chile, unknown location, (BMNH) Paralectotype: 809616, Lectotype: 809617, (CU) CU010; C. leptoneuroides plumbeola Chile, Magallanes Province, (BMNH) Holotype 809624, (UJ) 5 males, 2 females. : Published as part of Matz, Jess & Brower, Andrew V. Z., 2016, The South Temperate Pronophilina (Lepidoptera: Nymphalidae: Satyrinae): a phylogenetic hypothesis, redescriptions and revisionary notes, pp. 1-108 in Zootaxa 4125 (1) on pages 23-24, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4125.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/271704 : {"references": ["Felder, C. & Felder, R. (1867) Reise der osterreichischen Fregatte Novara um die Erde in den Jahren 1857, 1859, 1859 unter den Befehlen des Commodore B. von Wullensdorf - Urbair. Zoologischer Thiel. Zweiter Band. Zweite Abteilung: Lepidoptera. Carl Gerold's Sohn, Wien, 536 + 9 pp., 74 pls.", "Berg, F. W. K. (1877 a) Beitrage zu den Lepidopteren Patagoniens. Bulletin de la Societe imperiale des naturalistes de Moscou, 52 (2), 1 - 22.", "Staudinger, O. (1899) Lepidopteren. In: Naturhistorisches Museum, Hamburg, Hamburger Magalhaensische Sammelreise, L. Friederichsen & Co., Hamburg, pp. 1 - 117, pl. 1.", "Weymer, G. (1911) 4. Familie: Satyridae. In: Seitz, A. (Ed.), Die Gross - Schmetterlinge der Erde. A. Kernen, Stuttgart, pp. 173 - 280.", "Butler, A. G. (1868) Catalogue of diurnal Lepidoptera of the family Satyridae in the Collection of the British Museum. Taylor and Francis, London, 211 pp.", "Reed, E. C. (1877) Una monografia de las mariposas chilenas. Anales de la Universidad de Chile, 51 (9), 647 - 736, pls. 1 - 3."]}
format Text
author Matz, Jess
Brower, Andrew V. Z.
author_facet Matz, Jess
Brower, Andrew V. Z.
author_sort Matz, Jess
title Cosmosatyrus leptoneuroides subsp. leptoneuroides C. Felder & R. Felder 1867
title_short Cosmosatyrus leptoneuroides subsp. leptoneuroides C. Felder & R. Felder 1867
title_full Cosmosatyrus leptoneuroides subsp. leptoneuroides C. Felder & R. Felder 1867
title_fullStr Cosmosatyrus leptoneuroides subsp. leptoneuroides C. Felder & R. Felder 1867
title_full_unstemmed Cosmosatyrus leptoneuroides subsp. leptoneuroides C. Felder & R. Felder 1867
title_sort cosmosatyrus leptoneuroides subsp. leptoneuroides c. felder & r. felder 1867
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2016
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6070010
https://zenodo.org/record/6070010
long_lat ENVELOPE(-62.933,-62.933,-64.883,-64.883)
ENVELOPE(9.914,9.914,63.019,63.019)
ENVELOPE(-59.467,-59.467,-62.467,-62.467)
ENVELOPE(-64.300,-64.300,-66.633,-66.633)
ENVELOPE(166.083,166.083,-71.717,-71.717)
ENVELOPE(162.333,162.333,-74.667,-74.667)
ENVELOPE(-66.450,-66.450,-66.467,-66.467)
ENVELOPE(-66.883,-66.883,-67.000,-67.000)
geographic Argentina
Magallanes
Stripe
Prat
Friederichsen
Seitz
Matz
Bío Bío
Cerro Castillo
geographic_facet Argentina
Magallanes
Stripe
Prat
Friederichsen
Seitz
Matz
Bío Bío
Cerro Castillo
genre Antarc*
genre_facet Antarc*
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op_rights Open Access
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https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode
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op_rightsnorm CC0
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6070010
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6070010 2023-05-15T13:54:44+02:00 Cosmosatyrus leptoneuroides subsp. leptoneuroides C. Felder & R. Felder 1867 Matz, Jess Brower, Andrew V. Z. 2016 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6070010 https://zenodo.org/record/6070010 unknown Zenodo http://zenodo.org/record/271704 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFC8FFAFFF8B847DFF86FFA0FFD9B918 http://zoobank.org/118F4865-D89E-45EA-A210-8D61946CC37F https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4125.1.1 http://zenodo.org/record/271704 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFC8FFAFFF8B847DFF86FFA0FFD9B918 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.271708 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.271727 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.271717 http://zoobank.org/118F4865-D89E-45EA-A210-8D61946CC37F https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6070011 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit Open Access Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode cc0-1.0 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess CC0 Biodiversity Taxonomy Animalia Arthropoda Insecta Lepidoptera Nymphalidae Cosmosatyrus Cosmosatyrus leptoneuroides Cosmosatyrus leptoneuroides leptoneuroides c. felder & r. felder, 1867 article-journal ScholarlyArticle Taxonomic treatment Text 2016 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6070010 https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4125.1.1 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.271708 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.271727 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.271717 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6070011 2022-04-01T10:16:43Z Cosmosatyrus leptoneuroides leptoneuroides C. Felder & R. Felder, 1867 (Figs. 4 D–F; 13 G–I; 24) Lectotype: (male) BMNH # 809617 (Specimen examined) Paralectotype: (male) BMNH # 809616 (Specimen examined) Type location: Chile = Satyrus morania Berg, 1877 a Lectotype: (male) MACN, Buenos Aires (Photo examined) Type location: Santa Cruz Province, Argentina = Erebia plumbeola var. duseni Staudinger, 1899 Holotype: (female) MFN, Berlin (Photo examined) Type location: P. Dusén, Rio Aysén, Aysén Province, Chile = Cosmosatyrus statia Weymer, 1911 Type: no type Type location: Chile Subspecies: Cosmosatyrus leptoneuroides plumbeola (Butler, 1868) ( Tetraphlebia? ) Holotype: (male) BMNH # 809624 (Specimen examined) Type location: Puerto Hambre, Magallanes Province, Chile = Satyrus antarctia Reed, 1877 Holotype by indication (ICZN Art. 12.2.7): Plate II fig. 4 in Reed (1877) Distribution . Found in Chile from the coast of central Coquimbo Province, south to the Strait of Magellan and in Argentina, in northern Neuquén Province and on the islands of the Paraná Delta north of Buenos Aires from November to March at nearly sea level to 3800m (Fig. 24). Diagnosis . Easily distinguished from other Neosatyriti by distinct patterning on the VHW (Fig. 4 D–F). Postmedian band with the proximal edge daffodil yellow that fades to chocolate brown and bearing an ocellus in each cell between Rs and CuA 2. Ocelli between Rs-M 1, M 1 -M 2, and CuA 1 -CuA 2 are round, black, unipupillate, and ringed in daffodil yellow, the Rs-M 1 ocellus being the smaller of these. Ocelli between M 2 -M 3 and M 3 -CuA 1 are round, white, and may be ringed in daffodil yellow. Hindwing veins are highlighted in white, more strongly so at the proximal edge of the postmedian band. Ventral side of the forewing bears a patch covering the discal cell to the proximal edge of the postmedian band that may be orange, rust orange, rust red, or peach, depending on the region from which the specimen was collected. Apical ocellus on the ventral side of the hindwing varies from a small, unipupillate black spot ringed in daffodil yellow that is confined within M 1 -M 2 to a large bipupillate black ocellus ringed in daffodil yellow that spans across M 1 -M 3. Specimens from Magallanes Province, Chile, may entirely lack this ocellus. Foreleg tarsi unsegmented in both sexes, but female tarsi may be constricted near the distal end, having the appearance of segmentation without being articulated. Redescription. Head: Antennae 7–10mm with white to cream scales and a longitudinal stripe of chocolate brown scales that covers half of a spatulate club. Eyes round and naked, length approximately 1.2 times width. Palps with a longitudinal white to cream stripe along the median with the dorsal side piliform scales chocolate brown and the ventral side with black, tan, and chocolate piliform scales and white to cream piliform scales included toward the base. Males with the terminal segment entirely chocolate to dark chocolate brown and females with white scales that continue the longitudinal white stripe from the second segment. Terminal palp segment cylindrical and a little more than one-third the length of the second segment. Thorax sepia with iridescent black scales and covered in chocolate and cream piliform scales. Females similar, but with cream to white scales in addition to the iridescent black. Abdomen cream ventrally and chocolate to dark chocolate brown dorsally. Foreleg tarsi unsegmented and clublike in the males, the female tarsi a little longer and sometimes having the appearance of segmentation approximately where the first tarsal segment would be. This pseudo-segmentation appears as a slight constriction or line that circumscribes the tarsus. Forewing (Fig. 4 D–F): Wingspan 28–35mm. Termen nearly straight or slightly convex and the distal end of the discal cell sinuous, the costal half more deeply curved than the cubital half. Males with androconial scales that extend in triangular patches from M 1 to 1 A+ 2 A and into the discal cell near M 2. Dorsal side chocolate to dark chocolate brown with fringe scales of the same color. Females slightly lighter than the males with fringe scales lighter than wing color. Ventral side with a patch that extends from the discal cell to the post median band in rust red, orange, rust orange, or peach. Color of this patch may be a regional variance. Costa, inner margin, and postmedian band to the termen are chocolate to dark chocolate brown, the termen sometimes edged in white and the postmedian band outlined in dark coffee. Apical ocellus may appear as a unipupillate round black spot ringed in daffodil yellow between M 1 -M 2, as a bipupillate black spot ringed in daffodil yellow that extends from M 1 -M 3, or as two separate ocelli that may begin to fuse at M 2. Specimens from Magallanes province in Chile may be entirely without this ocellus. A whitish patch is sometimes visible where the radial veins meet the costa. Hindwing (Fig. 4 D–F): Wing oval, termen slightly convex and barely scalloped with the inner margin excavated between the anal vein and 1 A+ 2 A. Dorsal side similar in color to the forewing, sometimes with patches of rust red along the most distal edge of the postmedian band. Long piliform scales appearing on both sexes at the base and over the discal cell, extending to the median. Ventral side chocolate brown with a ripple pattern of dark chocolate to dark coffee striations that extends from the base to the postmedian band and a sinuous submedian line in dark chocolate to dark coffee. Both edges of the postmedian band scalloped, the proximal edge more so than the distal edge, and outlined in dark chocolate to dark coffee. Postmedian band chocolate brown with the proximal edge daffodil to maize yellow. Black ocelli ringed in yellow, sometimes unipupillate, appear between Rs-M 1, M 1 - M 2, and CuA 1 -CuA 2. The first of these slightly smaller than the other two. A round white ocellus, sometimes ringed in yellow, appears between M 2 -M 3 and M 3 -CuA 1. Veins are highlighted in white. Male genitalia (Fig. 13 G–I): Uncus widest at the base, narrowing gradually to a blunt finger-like terminus, and approximately twice as long as the tegumen. Gnathos acute and a little more than half the length of the uncus. Pedunculus long and U-shaped. Saccus U-shaped and one-third the length of the gnathos. Valvae narrow at the proximal end, more than doubling in width at the proximal one-third and gradually narrowing toward the distal end. Distal one-third widens dorsally then attenuates abruptly at the distal one-fourth to a finger-like terminus. Aedeagus nearly even in width throughout, slightly wider at the median, and with an acute proximal end. Remarks . Specimen (male) BMNH # 809617 is newly designated as the lectotype for C. leptoneuroides , none having previously been designated from the syntype series. The paralectotype is identical but for a minor difference in the strength of the yellow median border of the postmedian band. With a few notable exceptions, the wing patterning of C. leptoneuriodes is fairly uniform across its geographical range, which extends from Coquimbo Province 300km north of Santiago, Chile, to the Straits of Magellan in the far south. Cosmosatyrus statia , from the illustration in Weymer (1911), appears in every respect to agree with the C. leptoneuroides leptoneuroides type, but without the Rs-M 1, M 2 -M 3, and M 3 -CuA 1 ocelli. Cosmosatyrus leptoneuroides plumbeola is the name applied to the southernmost examples of the species. There is no evidence of a contiguous range, leaving this subspecies apparently isolated from the nominal subspecies. Relative to the nominate form, C. leptoneuroides plumbeola tends to be smaller, darker, and with a more reduced M 1 -M 3 ocellus on the ventral side of the forewing. Curiously, a few specimens from near Cerro Castillo (51 º 14 ’ 28 ”S, 71 º 23 ’ 52 ”W) and Puerto Prat (51 º 38 ’S, 72 º 38 ’W) that completely lack the M 1 -M 3 ventral side forewing ocellus. Specimens examined. C. leptoneuroides leptoneuroides Chile, Bío-Bío Province, (MTSU) CH 15 - 5 - CH 15 - 7, CH 16 - 2, CH 24 A- 4, CL0201, CL0313, CL0315, CL0424, (UJ) 3 males, 4 females; Chile, unknown location, (BMNH) Paralectotype: 809616, Lectotype: 809617, (CU) CU010; C. leptoneuroides plumbeola Chile, Magallanes Province, (BMNH) Holotype 809624, (UJ) 5 males, 2 females. : Published as part of Matz, Jess & Brower, Andrew V. Z., 2016, The South Temperate Pronophilina (Lepidoptera: Nymphalidae: Satyrinae): a phylogenetic hypothesis, redescriptions and revisionary notes, pp. 1-108 in Zootaxa 4125 (1) on pages 23-24, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4125.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/271704 : {"references": ["Felder, C. & Felder, R. (1867) Reise der osterreichischen Fregatte Novara um die Erde in den Jahren 1857, 1859, 1859 unter den Befehlen des Commodore B. von Wullensdorf - Urbair. Zoologischer Thiel. Zweiter Band. Zweite Abteilung: Lepidoptera. Carl Gerold's Sohn, Wien, 536 + 9 pp., 74 pls.", "Berg, F. W. K. (1877 a) Beitrage zu den Lepidopteren Patagoniens. Bulletin de la Societe imperiale des naturalistes de Moscou, 52 (2), 1 - 22.", "Staudinger, O. (1899) Lepidopteren. In: Naturhistorisches Museum, Hamburg, Hamburger Magalhaensische Sammelreise, L. Friederichsen & Co., Hamburg, pp. 1 - 117, pl. 1.", "Weymer, G. (1911) 4. Familie: Satyridae. In: Seitz, A. (Ed.), Die Gross - Schmetterlinge der Erde. A. Kernen, Stuttgart, pp. 173 - 280.", "Butler, A. G. (1868) Catalogue of diurnal Lepidoptera of the family Satyridae in the Collection of the British Museum. Taylor and Francis, London, 211 pp.", "Reed, E. C. (1877) Una monografia de las mariposas chilenas. Anales de la Universidad de Chile, 51 (9), 647 - 736, pls. 1 - 3."]} Text Antarc* DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Argentina Magallanes ENVELOPE(-62.933,-62.933,-64.883,-64.883) Stripe ENVELOPE(9.914,9.914,63.019,63.019) Prat ENVELOPE(-59.467,-59.467,-62.467,-62.467) Friederichsen ENVELOPE(-64.300,-64.300,-66.633,-66.633) Seitz ENVELOPE(166.083,166.083,-71.717,-71.717) Matz ENVELOPE(162.333,162.333,-74.667,-74.667) Bío Bío ENVELOPE(-66.450,-66.450,-66.467,-66.467) Cerro Castillo ENVELOPE(-66.883,-66.883,-67.000,-67.000)