Pampasatyrus gyrtone (Berg 1877)
- Dataset
- The South Temperate Pronophilina (Lepidoptera: Nymphalidae: Satyrinae): a phylogenetic hypothesis, redescriptions and revisionary notes
- Rank
- SPECIES
Classification
- kingdom
- Animalia
- phylum
- Arthropoda
- class
- Insecta
- order
- Lepidoptera
- family
- Nymphalidae
- genus
- Pampasatyrus
- species
- Pampasatyrus gyrtone
description
Redescription. Head: Antennae 8 – 10 mm with tan to dark chocolate scales and terminating in a spatulate club. Eyes oval and naked, length approximately 1.3 X the width. Palps cream and tan in the females and in the males chocolate and dark chocolate on the ventral side and cream and chocolate on the dorsal side. Terminal palp segment cylindrical and a little more than one-third the length of the second segment. Thorax dark amber with iridescent dark grey to brown scales, the females also bearing cream scales interspersed with the iridescent dark grey to brown scales. Abdomen dark chocolate dorsally and tan ventrally. Foreleg extremely reduced in size, measuring in its entirety less than the length of the second palp segment with the tarsi club-like and unsegmented in both sexes. Midlegs and hindlegs with four rows of black spines on the tibia and tarsus. Forewing (Fig. 9 A): Wingspan 30 – 35 mm. Termen nearly straight and the distal end of the discal cell deeply sinuous with the distance between M 1 - M 2 about equal to that between M 2 - M 3. Males with no visible androconial patch. Dorsal side coppery brown with fringe scales in the same color. Postmedian band may appear as a barely discernible, slightly lighter patch of scales. Apical ocellus between M 1 - M 3 appearing as a single, black to dark chocolate bipupillate spot ringed in maize yellow or as two distinct unipupillate ocelli fused at M 2. Another, smaller ocellus sometimes appears between CuA 1 - CuA 2 and may or may not bear a single white pupil. Ventral side tawny with a postmedian band outlined in dark chocolate brown. Median edge of the postmedian band irregular, edged in maize yellow, and curving sharply toward the M 1 - M 3 ocellus at the costa. Subterminal edge of the postmedian band nearly straight, edged in white over the radials, and curving slightly toward the M 1 - M 3 ocellus at the costa. Terminal band white with a chocolate brown proximal edge. Ocellus between M 1 - M 3 black and bipupillate, ringed in maize yellow. Another, smaller, black ocellus ringed in maize yellow appears between CuA 1 - CuA 2 and may or may not have a single white pupil. Hindwing (Fig. 9 A): Wing trapezoidal, termen slightly convex, barely scalloped, almost entire, and the inner margin slightly excavated between the anal vein and 1 A + 2 A. Dorsal side coppery brown with fringe scales of the same color. Postmedian band may appear faintly as a slightly lighter band and / or patches of rust orange in each cell between M 2 - CuA 2. Ocellus usually appearing between CuA 1 - CuA 2 as a dark chocolate brown spot ringed in rust orange to rust red. Other similar ocelli may appear in each cell between Rs-CuA 1 and CuA 1 - 1 A + 2 A or are absent. Long piliform scales appear on both sexes at the base and over the discal cell, extending to the median and toward the inner margin. Ventral side tawny dusted with white to cream scales and with chocolate striations in a ripple pattern over most of the wing. Proximal side of the postmedian band nearly straight, bordered in chocolate brown, and edged in white. Distal border deckle-edged and dark chocolate brown, the internal edge maize yellow toward the tornus and white toward the costa, the color changing at M 2. Terminal band thin and white. Round to oval ocelli ringed in maize yellow present in each cell from Rs to 1 A + 2 A, those between M 1 - M 2, M 2 - M 3, and CuA 1 - CuA 2 slightly larger and may be unipupillate. Veins highlighted in white. Male genitalia (Fig. 18 A – C): Uncus narrow and finger-like, widening slightly just past where it fuses with the tegumen, narrowing to a blunt distal end, and approximately 1.1 X the length of the tegumen. Gnathos acute and a little less than half the length of the uncus, pedunculus long and U-shaped, and saccus deltoid and about half the length of the gnathos. Valvae narrow at the proximal one-fourth, then doubling in width and narrowing gradually to an acute distal end. Aedeagus nearly even in width along the distal one-half, wider at the median, bearing wing-like projections on each side, and narrowing abruptly to a thin and blunt proximal end. Specimens examined. Brazil, Estado Minas Gerais, (MGCL) 1 male, 1 female.
diagnosis
Diagnosis. Similar to Pampasatyrus nilesi, but with the ventral side hindwing ocelli black and sometimes unipupillate and the postmedian band and termen edged in white. Dorsal side coppery brown with the M 1 - M 3 ocellus on the forewing appearing as a single, black to dark chocolate bipupillate spot ringed in maize yellow or as two distinct unipupillate ocelli fused at M 2. Ventral side tawny with the postmedian band bordered in chocolate to dark chocolate brown on both wings. Forewing ocellus between M 1 - M 3 bipupillate and ringed in maize yellow and another similar ocellus may appear between CuA 1 - CuA 2. Ventral side of the hindwing bears a black, round to oval ocellus ringed in maize yellow in each cell from Rs to 1 A + 2 A. Ventral side hindwing veins highlighted in white. Forelegs extremely reduced in both sexes and shorter than the second palp segment. Aedeagus with winglike projections at the median as in Argyrophorus argenteus.
distribution
Distribution. Can be found in Argentina from central Cordoba province to southern Santa Fe province to northern Buenos Aires province, south to Tandil in central Buenos Aires province, and as far north as the Serra Da Mantiqueira Mountains between São Paulo and the western border of Rio de Janeiro Province, Brazil, from late January to March at nearly sea level to 2200 m (Fig. 28).
materials_examined
Type location: Tandil, Buenos Aires Province, Argentina
Name
- Homonyms
- Pampasatyrus gyrtone (Berg 1877)