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Journal of the Lepidopterists' Society 34(1), 1980, 20-24
A NEW PLEBEJUS (ICARICIA) SHASTA (EDWARDS) FROM SOUTHERN NEVADA (LYCAENIDAE)
George T. Austin1
Department of Biological Sciences, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, Las Vegas, Nevada 89154
ABSTRACT. The distinctive population of Plebejus (Icaricia) shasta (Edwards), known only from the Spring Range (Clark Co.) Nevada, is described as the new subspecies, P. s. charlestonensis. No intermediate populations are known. Its abundance varies widely from year to year. The distinctness of this and other endemic taxa further confirms the isolation of the fauna of the Spring Range.
In his recent revision of the Plebejus (Icaricia) shasta (Edwards) complex, Ferris (1976) failed to recognize the distinctive population occurring at the higher elevations of the Spring Range in Clark County, Nevada. The first mention of this population was by Garth (1928) who recognized it as distinct from nominate shasta of California; its difference from other shasta populations was further reiterated by Emmel and Shields (in press). The Spring Range specimen illustrated in Howe (1975) was designated shasta shasta form "comstocki." Ferris (1976) included Spring Range material with the wide-ranging P. shasta minnehaha (Scudder). Ferris (1976) saw no reason to describe local isolated colonies as new taxa. However, in light of the distinctiveness of Spring Range shasta and of the occurrence of at least three well defined races of other butterflies endemic to the mountains of southern Nevada, it seems appropriate to name this population of P. shasta.
Plebejus shasta charlestonensis, new subspecies
(Fig. 1)
Male (based on holotype and 6 topoparatypes) dorsal surface. Primaries bright violet-blue (near Mauve, all capitalized colors herein after Smithe, 1975); discal cell spot black and prominent; wing border black, narrow and sharply defined with few black scales extending basad except along the veins; fringe entirely white. Secondaries of same ground color as primaries; marginal spots large and well defined occurring in cells Rs through Cu2 with those in Rs and Cu2 occasionally blurred and that in Cu! the largest. Distad to the marginal spots, a well defined pale gray (nearly white) line interrupted by black-scaled veins; the black scaling of the veins extending proximally to somewhat basad of the marginal spots; discal cell spot narrow and not particularly prominent. Distal to the pale marginal line, a black terminal band adjacent to a pure white fringe; fringe on the inner (anal) margin pale gray-brown somewhat paler than the gray-brown scales along the inner margin of this wing. Ventral surface. Primaries clear pale gray (Pale Neutral Gray) fading to brownish gray; a large elongate black spot at the distal end of discal cell and another smaller spot in the middle part of this cell in all seven specimens. Post-median spot row composed of large black spots except in
1 Present address: Nevada State Museum, Capitol Complex, Carson City, Nevada 89710.
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FlG. 1. Plebejus shasta charlestonensis n. ssp. Left: ventral surface of holotype 6 (upper) and allotype 9 (lower). Right: dorsal surface of holotype 6 (upper) and allotype 9 (lower). Photos by R. Aseltine.
Cu2 where the spot is dark gray in most specimens; all spots heretofore mentioned narrowly and indistinctly outlined with pale gray. The submarginal spot row brownish-gray; the marginal row a similar but paler color. Terminal line brownish-gray bordering a white fringe. Secondaries slightly paler than primaries with all spots in the post-median row and basal area black and indistinctly outlined with pale gray. In some specimens the posterior spots (beyond Mt) with a slight brownish-gray cast as the spot in the end of the discal cell. Marginal metallic Apple Green spots in cells Mj to Cu2 centered with black and capped with clear orange (near Chrome Orange) lunules which are in turn capped with black; basal to this a very pale gray area grading into the gray-brown ground color of the rest of the wing; a narrow, pale gray line separating the metallic spots from a brownish-gray terminal line adjacent to a white fringe. The mar-ginal-submarginal pattern weakly represented in cell Rs of some specimens and usually represented only by black submarginal spots in this and cell Sc + Rt.
Female (based on allotype and six topoparatypes) dorsal surface. Primaries dark brownish-black with an extensive violet-blue overlay of about the same color as the male; this overlay extending from the wing base to at least the end of the discal cell and in most specimens to at least 50% further towards the outer margin along the inner margin of the wing; the costal margin (except basally) and the apical area without the violet-blue overlay. The discal cell spot prominent and averaging larger than in the male. Secondaries of the same dark brownish-black ground color as the primaries with the entire basal portion posterior to Mj overlaid with violet-blue, this extending distally to the marginal-submarginal band. The marginal black spots large and black, often pointed basally and largest in Cua; these capped basally with broad orange to orange-brown (most specimens near Chrome Orange) lunules, interrupted from forming a complete band by relatively indistinct black-scaled veins; the orange lunules bordered
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Journal of the Lepidopterists' Society
basally by a distinct black band; adjacent to the latter, in some specimens, an area devoid of the blackish ground color which makes the violet overlay appear as a very pale violet color; distal to the black marginal spots, a narrow, but distinct, pale gray line; the white fringe bordered inwardly by a black band. The marginal pattern indistinctly represented in cell Rs in some specimens. The inner marginal area and its fringe similar to the male. Ventral surface. Quite similar to the male but the post-median spots tending larger on both the primaries and secondaries. Three of the seven specimens with a mid-discal cell spot on the primaries.
Types2. Holotype 8: Lee's ( = Lee) Canyon, (Spring Range), Clark Co. (unty), Nev. (ada), 8,500', 21 July 1963. Allotype 9: Lee's ( = Lee) Canyon, (Spring Range), Clark Co. (unty), Nev. (ada), 8,250', 21 July 1963. This specimen lacks the right antenna and most of the left. Topoparatypes: 68, Lee's ( = Lee) Canyon, (Spring Range), Clark Co. (unty), Nev. (ada), 8,250', 21 July 1963; 4 9, Lee's ( = Lee) Canyon, (Spring Range), Clark Co. (unty), Nev. (ada), 8,250', 21 July 1963; 19, same data except 8,550'; 19, same data except 8,800'. Entire type series collected by George T., Anna T. and Edward J. Austin.
Deposition of type material. The holotype and allotype will be deposited in the Los Angeles County Museum, Los Angeles, California; a pair of topoparatypes will be deposited in the Nevada State Museum, Carson City, Nevada; the remaining topoparatypes will be retained by the author.
Type locality. NEVADA: Clark Co.; Spring Range, Lee Canyon, 8,250-8,800'. This is the open area between Lee Canyon Guard Station and the ski tow as shown on USGS Charleston Peak, Nevada, quadrangle, 15 minute series (R 56E, T 18S, S 10 and S 15) and virtually surrounded by a forest of Ponderosa and Bristlecone pines (Pinus ponderosa Dougl. and P. aristata Engelm.) and White Fir (Abies concolor (Gord.) Parry).
Additional specimens examined, (all NEVADA: Clark Co., Spring Range) Kyle Canyon Road above chain, ca. 8,500', 27 July 1965 (19); Kyle Canyon, 9,000', 25 July 1965 (18, both Austin collection); Lee Canyon (near ski area), 5 July 1976 (18, D. Mullins collection). Other known specimens, (all NEVADA: Clark Co.; Spring Range) Willow Creek, 6,000-8,000', 15 July 1928 (15c? 199, Gunder collection in American Museum of Natural History, fide J. F. Emmel); Lee Canyon Ski Run, 8,600', 12 and 17 August 1963 (8 specimens, J. F. Leser collection); Cathedral Rock (Kyle Canyon) 8,500', 10 July 1972 (1 specimen, D. E. Allen collection); road between Kyle Canyon Camp and Deer Creek Camp ( = Deer Creek Road), ca. 7,000', 1 July 1950 (29, from field notes of F. W. Preston where listed as Plebius (sic) acrnon, one of these illustrated in Howe, 1975). The specimens in the Gunder collection must be part of the series of "several hundred" collected by Morand as mentioned by Garth (1928). The fate of the remaining specimens of this series is unknown to the author.
Geographic range, phenology and abundance. To date, P. shasta charlestonen-sis is known only from the Spring Range between 6,000 and 9,000' in the Kyle Canyon-Lee Canyon areas and in the northern part of the range near Willow Creek. The known flight period of the single brood extends from 5 July to 17 August, probably peaking in late July. It apparently varies greatly in abundance as numerous specimens were taken in 1928 and 1963, 2 specimens in 1965 and one in 1976. No other specimens are known although areas close to known collection sites of P. shasta are visited regularly by collectors seeking the other Spring Range endemics. In 1977,1 collected extensively in Kyle Canyon and at Willow Creek throughout the summer and was at the type locality in Lee Canyon on 7 and 29 July but no shasta were seen.
Etymology. This subspecies is named after the highest peak in the Spring Range and a popular name for the main mass of the Spring Range.
Discussion. The new subspecies is the most distinctive of the races of P. shasta.
2 Data on types are as indicated on specimen labels, parenthetical data correct errors or clarify label data.
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Its closest relationships appear to be with the Great Basin populations allied to P. s. minnehaha. The dorsal ground coloration of males is as bright or brighter than min-nehaha with more violet and less blue (other populations, including nominate shasta, tend towards Campanula). Its narrow borders are like those of minnehaha and contrast with the broad borders of nominate shasta. Beneath, the pattern is clear and bold with less tendency for the post-median spot row to fade into the ground color. This in itself distinguishes the taxon. The orange submarginal lunules are a clear, Chrome Orange and not dull (usually near Cinnamon Rufous) as in the other races. The females are even more strongly different from those of other shasta populations. The violet-blue overscaling is extensive, covering about 75% of the dorsal wing surfaces and of the same color as in males. The marginal pattern of the dorsal hind wing is very prominent with large marginal black spots capped broadly with orange lunules which are set off from the violet wing coloration by a broad dark band. The orange band is broad and clearly defined in all female charlestonensis examined; it is often narrow and/or indistinct and overscaled with black in females from other populations. The ventral surface pattern is clear and bold as in males. The post-median spot row of the ventral secondaries tends to approach closer to the marginal band especially towards the anal angle. In many respects the females of this population of P. shasta superficially resemble Plehejus acmon (Westwood and Hewitson). The painting of the Spring Range P. shasta in Howe (1975, plate 59, Fig. 16) is a fairly good representation of the female of this new subspecies.
The justification for naming this population aside from its definite pattern differences from other shasta populations lies in the isolation of the Spring Range (and the nearby Sheep Range) from other mountain masses of similar elevation by some 75 miles of low, arid desert. This isolation has resulted in the differentiation of three named taxa of other butterflies: Limenitis weidemeyerii nevadae (Barnes & Benjamin), Euphydryas anicia morandi Gunder and Speyeria zerene carolae (dos Passos & Grey). Endemism is known for other taxa including plants (Clokey, 1951), mammals (Hall, 1946) and, to some degree, birds (Johnson, 1965).
Ferris (1976) included all Nevada shasta in minnehaha but he did not have material from the Sierra Nevada of extreme western Nevada. I have examined over 100 Nevada specimens (outside Clark County) in the Nevada State Museum and my personal collection. Specimens from Washoe Co. (Mt. Rose, Hobart Reservoir) and Ormsby Co. (Snow Valley) are clearly within the concept of nominate shasta. Those from Elko (Angel Lake) and White Pine (Mt. Wheeler, Stella Lake, Bald Mt.) counties are best referred to unnamed populations allied to minnehaha (see Emmel and Shields, in press). Material from Lander (Mahogany Canyon), Mineral (Corey Peak), Esmeralda (Trail Canyon) and possibly Douglas (Mt. Siegel) and Pershing (Star Peak) counties appear intermediate between these unnamed segregates and nominate shasta. None of these populations shows any intermediacy towards charlestonensis.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
I thank John F. Emmel, Douglas Mullins and Oakley Shields for prompting me into describing this taxon which had been my intention for a considerable period of time. Dr. Emmel additionally made useful comments on an early draft of the manuscript and provided me with a copy of his and Shields' unpublished paper. I am grateful to Julian Donahue at the Los Angeles County Museum for allowing me to examine specimens housed at that institution and to J. Scott Miller of the Nevada State Museum for a loan of their entire series of P. shasta from Nevada. I also thank others (cited above) for allowing me to view or for sending data on other Spring Range specimens.
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Literature Cited
Clokey, I. W. 1951. Flora of the Charleston Mountains, Clark County, Nevada. Univ.
Calif. Publ. Botany, No. 24. Emmel, J. F. & O. Shields. The biology of Plebejus (Icaricia) shasta in the western
United States (Lycaenidae). J. Res. Lepid., in press. FERRIS, C. D. 1976. Revisionary notes on Plebejus (Icaricia) shasta (Edwards). Bull.
Allyn Musepm, No. 36. Garth, J. S. 19t28. Report of the Lorquin Entomological Society of Los Angeles. Proc.
So. Calif. Abad. Sci. 27: 93-94. Hall, E. R. 1946. Mammals of Nevada. Univ. Calif. Press, Berkeley. Howe, W. H. 1975. The butterflies of North America. Doubleday, Garden City, N.Y. Johnson, N. K. 1965. The breeding avifaunas of the Sheep and Spring ranges in
southern Nevada. Condor 67: 93-124. Smithe, F. B. 1975. Naturalist's color guide. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist, New York.
Journal of the Lepidopterists' Society 34(1), 1980, 24
THE IDENTITY OF THE PLANT REFERRED TO AS ANDROMEDA BY W. T. M. FORBES
The name Andromeda has been used ambiguously in the lepidopteran literature. A striking example is in its mention as a larval host for Datana major Grote and Robinson and Datana ranaeceps (Guerin) by Forbes (1948, Lepidoptera of New York ... II: Cornell U. Agric. Expt. Sta. Mem. 274, p. 215). The ranges of both of these species lie almost entirely to the south and east of the only species of the genus Andromeda covered by Fernald (1950, Gray's Manual of Botany, 8th ed. Amer. Book Co., N.Y., p. 1123). Furthermore, Robinson and Fernald (1908, Gray's New Manual of Botany, 7th ed., Amer. Book Co., p. 635) list Andromeda as an old generic name for three species of Lyonia. They also include Pieris floribunda (Pursh) B. & H. in Andromeda. In an earlier work, Forbes (1923, Lepidoptera of New York ... I: Cornell U. Agric. Expt. Sta. Mem. 68, p. 700) makes the following citation in the food index "Andromeda (Andromeda, Lyonia): villela 312." The moth (Holcocera villela Busck) is listed in the text as feeding on Andromeda ligustrina, a plant placed in Lyonia by Fernald (1950) and Robinson and Fernald (1908).
I have repeatedly found eggs and larvae of both of the above Datana on Lyonia mariana (L.) D. Don. in the New Jersey Pine Barrens. D. major also utilizes Leucothoe racemosa (L.) Gray about equally often. Older larvae of both occasionally wander to highbush blueberries (Vaccinium 2 or 3 spp.). No species of Pieris or Andromeda is native to that region.
Thus, lepidopterists should consider host records of Andromeda (or Andromeda) cautiously unless the species is stated. It is virtually certain that such records for Datana and probably Catocala andromedae (Guenee) (Forbes, 1954, Lepidoptera of New York . . . Ill, Cornell U. Agric. Expt. Sta. Mem. 329, p. 333) actually refer to some species of Lyonia.
Dale F. Schweitzer, Curatorial Associate in Entomology, Peabody Museum, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut 06520.