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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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Matz, Jess, Brower, Andrew V. Z.
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://zenodo.org/record/6070011
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6070011
Description
Summary: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 ...