The text below is grayed out because it is not intended to be read. It is a necessarily imperfect OCR of the original and is only used by a search engine.
Journal of the Lepidopterists' Society 38(1), 1984, 13-14
CORRECT NAME FOR THE NEOTROPICAL SQUASH-VINE BORER (SESIIDAE: MELITTIA)
Vitor O. Becker1
and
Thomas D. Eichlin2
ABSTRACT. The identity of the species of squash-vine borer occurring in Central and South America on cultivated Cucurbitaceae is established as Melittia pulchripes, not M. satyriniformis, which is a junior synonym of the Eastern squash-vine borer, M. cucurbitae. A lectotype is designated for M. riograndensis, a name which is then syn-onymized under M. pulchripes.
For more than a century the Melittia species whose larvae are commonly found boring in stems of many cultivated species of Cucurbitaceae in Central and South America has been referred to in the literature as M. satyriniformis Hiibner. In a study by Duckworth and Eichlin (1973) it was found that in the Western Hemisphere these borers belong to a complex of three closely related species: cucurbitae (Harris), satyriniformis Hiibner, and a third which they described and named calabaza. According to these authors (1973:154), the three species of the complex are easily distinguished by their external features and genitalia. A fourth species, pauper LeCerf, apparently occurs only in the vicinity of Lima, Peru. Both cucurbitae and calabaza are restricted to the United States and Mexico and are sympatric in the southern part of their range. The species distributed from Guatemala through Central and South America was regarded by them as satyriniformis, following the use of earlier authors.
Heppner and Duckworth (1981:26) established that satyriniformis is a junior synonym of cucurbitae. This was based mainly on the fact that Hiibner stated that the type locality of satyriniformis was "Georgia" and therefore, must be conspecific with cucurbitae, the only squash-vine borer from the region.
We have examined the syntypes of riograndensis Brethes (1920:284) and found that they are the same species as the Central and South American species previously and currently misnamed as satyriniformis. Two male syntypes of riograndensis were located in the Museo Argentino de Ciencias Naturalis (MACN), Buenos Aires, both bearing identical labels in Brethes' hand-writing: "17"; "E. Ronna, vi. 1919, Pelotas"; "Type"; "Melittia riograndensis Breth."; (red rectangle). The
1 Centro de Pesquisa Agropecuaria dos Cerrados, P.O. Box 70-0023, 73300-Planaltina, DF, Brazil.
2 Division of Plant Industry, Insect Taxonomy Laboratory, California Department of Food and Agriculture, Sacramento 95814, USA.
14
Journal of the Lepidopterists' Society
male specimen which had been dissected is here designated as the lectotype; the second male becomes a paralectotype. These two specimens are covered by mold, and their external features are somewhat obscured; however, the genitalia are identical to those of satyriniformis (sensu authors, including Duckworth and Eichlin, 1973:hg. 3c), bearing the peculiar quadrate expanded process at the center of the valva. They also agree with the genitalia of a specimen reared by the senior author from stems of Cucurbita sp. at Turrialba, Costa Rica.
However, the oldest available name for this species is Melittia pulchripes Walker (1856:67). Syntypes in the British Museum (Natural History) were examined and a lectotype designated (Duckworth and Eichlin, 1978:21). At this time it was determined to be conspecific with the Central and South American squash-vine borer. The previous references to satyriniformis for the Neotropical squash-vine borer should in fact be applied to pulchripes. Also, riograndensis now becomes a synonym of pulchripes (NEW SYNONYMY).
The following is a summary of the species comprising the squash-vine borer complex:
Melittia cucurbitae (Harris)—eastern half of United States, Gulf Coastal areas of Texas and Mexico to near Guatemala.
Melittia calabaza Duckworth and Eichlin—Arizona, central and western Texas, interior areas of Mexico to west coast.
Melittia pulchripes Walker—Guatemala south throughout Central and South America to southern Brazil.
Melittia pauper LeCerf—currently recorded only from Peru.
Literature Cited
Brethes, J. 1920. Insectos utiles y dafiinos del Rio Grande do Sul y de La Plata. Anales de la Sociedad Rural Argentiana 54:281-290.
Duckworth, W. D. & T. D. Eichlin. 1973. New species of clearwing moths (Lepi-doptera: Sesiidae) from North America. Proc. Entomol. Soc. Wash. 75:150-159.
---------- 1978. The type-material of Central and South American clearwing moths (Lep-
idoptera: Sesiidae). Smithson. Contr. Zool. 261:1-28.
Heppner, J. B. & W. D. Duckworth. 1981. Classification of the superfamily Sesioidea (Lepidoptera: Ditrysia). Smithson. Contr. Zool. 314:1-144.
Walker, F. 1856. List of the Specimens of Lepidopterous Insects in the British Museum. Part 8, 271 pages. London: British Museum.