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Journal of the Lepidopterists Society 46(2), 1992, 128-137
A NEW SPECIES OF COLORADIA FROM SONORA AND CHIHUAHUA, MEXICO (SATURNIIDAE: HEMILEUCINAE)
Claude Lemaire1
La Croix des Baux, F-84220 Gordes, France AND
Michael J. Smith2
7428 Holworthy Way, Sacramento, California 95842
ABSTRACT. Coloradia prchali, new species, is described from the mountains of eastern Sonora and western Chihuahua, Mexico. This charcoal black species is sympatric with Coloradia luski and has been collected only from the region around Yecora, Sonora, Mexico, at an elevation of 1050 m to 1900 m, primarily in the pine/oak forest habitat (Petran [Madrean] Conifer Forest). It also has been collected sparingly in the oak woodland habitat (Madrean Evergreen Woodland) just below the pine/oak forest community. Females of this species are attracted to Mercury Vapor and Ultra-violet light, but only five males have been collected at light. Males are primarily day fliers and have been observed flying (and attracted to virgin females) between 0900 and 1500 h. Genitalic characters indicate that C. prchali is most closely related to C. luski but characters of the foretibia are more similar to Coloradia pandora.
Additional key words: Systematics, variation, distribution, habitat, Sonoran Lepi-doptera Survey.
The Lepidoptera fauna of Sonora, Mexico, was poorly known until the past decade. Recent collecting efforts have increased significantly our understanding of this fauna (Holland & Forbes 1981, Friedlander 1985, Smith 1985, Opler 1986, Miller & Miller 1988, Donahue 1989, Rindge 1990). In 1982, Steve Prchal of Tucson, Arizona, began his ecological and entomological studies in the mountains and plains of Sonora. The successes of his early trips sparked the interests of several other Arizonan collectors and resulted in annual collecting trips into various parts of Sonora. A result of these expeditions has been a dramatic increase in the number of Lepidoptera recorded from northwestern Mexico, including saturniid moths (Saturniidae). Hoffmann (1942) recorded only six species of saturniids from Sonora. There are now 37 species of Saturniidae documented and another 5 to 10 species are considered possible from this Mexican state (M. Smith, unpubl. data). Many of these species have proven to be significant range extensions for Mexican Saturniidae, including Rothschildia orizaba orizaba (West-wood), Antheraea montezuma (Salle), Copaxa muellerana (Dyar), Au-tomeris boudinotiana Lemaire, Automeris metzli (Salle), Anisota as-similis Druce, Syssphinx colloida (Dyar), Citheronia beledonon Dyar,
1 Correspondant du Museum national d'Histoire naturelle, Paris.
2 Research Associate, Nevada State Museum and Historical Society, Las Vegas, Nevada.
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and Dysdaemonia boreas (Cramer). Certainly one of the most interesting discoveries was an undescribed charcoal-black, white-fringed Coloradia (Hemileucinae). Collecting efforts in 1988 through 1991 provided a number of specimens for study.
Coloradia prchali Lemaire & M. J. Smith, new species
(Figs. 1A & B, 2; Plate 1A & B)
Male. Head: Black, scattered with whitish scales; labial palpi two-segmented, about the same color as the frontal area. Antennae quadripectinate to the apex, flagellum rusty yellow, rami black; apical rami shorter than basal rami, those of outer side less than half as long as those of inner side of flagellum. Thorax: Dorsally covered with black hairs, speckled with white hairs, the latter most prevalent on the metathorax. Legs dark brown with intermixed black and white hairs; foretibia (Fig. 1C, D) lacking the epiphysis in the dissected specimens (n = 4) but bearing a long spine arising from the inner apical angle. Abdomen: Black, the white scales not abundant dorsally and ventrally but laterally forming well defined streaks. Forewing: Length 28.1-31.0 mm (x = 29.4 mm, n = 12). Above charcoal black, slightly and irregularly suffused with white scales; the overscaling most prevalent on the anterior half of the costa, the medial area and the outer side of the almost obsolescent postmedian line. The latter and the black rounded discal spot are all that remain of the ornamentation, except for small but contrasting white dots of the fringes at the apex of veins A to R5. Forewing below as dorsally with the whitish overscaling much reduced and restricted to the postmedian area. Hindwing: Above and below entirely black, with a slightly darker rounded discal spot; the pure white fringes contrasting well on both sides of the wing.
Female. Head: Same as male except antennae yellow, strongly bidentate to the apex. Thorax and abdomen: Same as male, except usually a more conspicuous speckling of white hairs on the dorsum of the abdomen. Forewing and hindwing: Same ground color and markings as in male, except usually with less white speckling on the upper forewings. Forewing length: 35.7-41.9 mm (x = 39.0 mm, n = 22), about one-third larger than the male.
Variation. Wing pattern elements and other structures appear to be consistent. Variation is restricted to the degree of whitish overscaling on the upper surface of the forewings of both sexes. Sexual dimorphism is negligible and is restricted to smaller overall size of males.
Male genitalia (Fig. 2A, B). Uncus down-curved, simple but apically bidentate, dorsally crowned by a broad subsclerotic protuberance, rising from the posterior edge of the tegumen, characteristic of the genus. Valves bilobed, transtilla with a narrow but strongly sclerotic medial plate laterally connected both to the anterior portion of the costal lobe of the valves and the posterior area of the tegumen. Juxta very narrow, laterally connected by a membrane to the base of the saccular lobe of the valves. Saccus broad, anteriorly rounded. Aedeagus small, slightly sinuous.
Female genitalia (Fig. 2C). Sclerotization of the eighth sternum circumvaginal with a broad membranous subtriangular medial area and laterally separated from the eighth tergum by a narrow membranous gap. Eighth tergum bilobed, subsclerotic. Postapophyses about one-fourth longer than the anapophyses. Ductus bursae membranous; bursa short, not bulky; ductus seminalis rising from the right hand side of base of bursa. Oviporus well developed, covered with relatively strong setae.
Types. Holotype: male, Mexico, Sonora, 11.2 km NW of Yecora, off old Santa Rosa to Yecora road, 1550 m, 2/4 July 1989 (leg. M. Lindberg). Allotype: female, same data as holotype. Paratypes: 15 males, 41 females, data as follows: 1 male, 11 females, same data as holotype; 1 male, 2 females, same locality as holotype, 3 July 1989 (leg. K. Koppos); 1 female, same locality as holotype, 3 July 1988 (leg. M. Lindberg); 2 females, same locality as holotype, 3 July 1989 (leg. R. Nagle); 3 females, same locality as holotype, 1/ 3 July 1989 (leg. M. Wilson); 9 females, same locality as holotype, 28/29 June 1990 (leg.
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Fig. 1. Forelegs of Color adia: A) C. pandora davisi male; B) C. luski male; C) C. prchali male; D) C. prchali female. Scale line = 1 mm.
M. Smith); 2 females, same locality as holotype, 28/29 June 1990 (leg. D. Mullins); 2 females, same locality as holotype, 28/29 June 1990 (leg. K. Hansen); 1 male, same locality as holotype, 28/29 June 1990 (leg. M. Lindberg); 1 male, same locality as holotype, 1/3 July 1989 (leg. J. Palting); 1 female, 4.0 km east of Santa Rosa, old Santa Rosa-Yecora road, 1040 m, 11/12 August 1983 (leg. S. Prchal); 1 female, 3.2 km south of La Trinidad mine, off old Santa Rosa-Yecora road, 1200 m, 28 July 1987 (leg. P. Jump); 11 males, 7 females, 9.6 km WSW of Yecora, Hwy 16, 1600 m, 7 July 1991 (leg. J. Brock & S. Prchal). Disposition of types. The holotype male and allotype female have been deposited in the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County, Los Angeles, California. One para-type pair has been deposited in the Museum national d'Histoire naturelle, Paris, France; two paratype pairs have been deposited in the Sonoran Arthropod Studies, Inc. (SASI) collection, Tucson, Arizona. Two paratype pairs have been deposited in the UNAM collections: Instituto de Biologia, Mexico, D.F., Mexico and Museo de Zoologia, Mexico, D.F., Mexico. Paratype pairs have been deposited in the collections of the following institutions: Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County, Los Angeles, California;
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Fig. 2. Male genitalia of Coloradia prchali new species: A) Ventral view, aedeagus removed; B) Lateral view of aedeagus. C) Female genitalia of Coloradia prchali new species. Scale line = 1 mm.
California Academy of Sciences, San Francisco, California; United States National Museum (Smithsonian Institution), Washington, D.C.; and American Museum of Natural History, New York, New York. Other paratypes will remain in the collections of the original collectors and of the junior author.
Diagnosis. Coloradia prchali differs from previously described Co-loradia species by its darker coloration, extreme reduction of ornamentation, and complete absence of red scales from the body as well
132 Journal of the Lepidopterists' Society
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Plate 1. Coloradia prchali, new species. A) Male holotype, Mexico, Sonora, 11.2 km NW of Yecora, off of Santa Rosa road, 1550 m, 2/4 July 1989 (leg. M. Lindberg). B) Female allotype, same data as holotype. Scale line = 10 mm.
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Fig. 3. Distribution of Coloradia prchali (•) in northwestern Mexico.
as from the hind wing. Coloradia prchali appears more closely related to Coloradia luski Barnes and Benjamin than to any other form of Coloradia. The wing pattern elements in both sexes are most similar to that of dark females of C. luski (see Ferguson 1971: pi. 6, fig. 13). However, C. luski never has the charcoal black color as on C. prchali. Coloradia prchali also differs from C. luski by its absence of sexual
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dimorphism in color and pattern and the lack of individual variation; whereas C. luski is probably the most variable species in Coloradia (Ferguson 1971; Lemaire, pers. obs.). Coloradia prchali is larger than C. luski in both sexes: Coloradia prchali males, x = 29.4 mm, n = 12; C. luski males, x = 26.5 mm, n = 12; Coloradia prchali females, x = 39.0 mm, n = 22; C. luski females, x = 30.6 mm, n = 2). The two species also are differentiated by the coloration of the rami in the male antennae, black in C. prchali and yellow in C. luski. Male specimens of C. prchali fly during the daytime (J. Brock & S. Prchal, pers. comm.), a unique habit within the genus. The foretibial spine (Fig. 1) is noticeably longer in relation to the tibia in C. prchali than in C. luski (24 percent vs. 16.7 percent). It is about the same percentage in C. prchali and C. pandora davisi Barnes & Benjamin (see Ferguson 1971). The small differences between the genitalia of C. prchali and C. luski, such as the absence of the notch at the apex of the dorsal protuberance of the uncus and the larger medial plate of the transtilla, require larger series of dissections to be analyzed for significance.
Etymology. This species is named in honor of Steve Prchal, who captured the first specimen of this saturniid and whose enthusiastic interests in Sonora sparked the collecting efforts of many others over the past decade.
Distribution (Fig. 3). All known specimens of C. prchali have been collected in the mountainous region around Yecora, in eastern Sonora, Mexico. This distribution includes western Chihuahua and is in the Sierra Madre Occidental mountains of northwestern Mexico. The type locality, located in the Petran (Madrean) Conifer Forest habitat of Brown (1982), is a plateau region northwest of Yecora at about 1550 m. Most of the known specimens of C. prchali have been collected in this habitat, which is community of pine/oak trees, some shrubs, and grasslands, including various conifer species as Pinus ponderosa Law-son, P. engelmannii Carr. [=P. latifolia Sarg.], and P. leiophylla var. chihuahuana Engelm. (all Pinaceae); Juniperus deppeana Steud. (Cu-pressaceae); and various evergreen oaks, including Q. pennivenia TreL, Q. arizonica Sarg., Q. grisea Liebm., Q. viminea TreL, and Q. fulva Lieb. (Fagaceae). Within this habitat, C. prchali also has been recorded from 6.4 km east-northeast of Yecora and from 9.6 km south of Yecora by P. Jump and S. McCleve. This latter locality is in Chihuahua, Mexico, and thus documents C. prchali for this Mexican state. Coloradia prchali also was recorded from 13.6 km west-southwest of Yecora at 1900 m by D. Mullins and B. Kelly. The latter locality is a more mixed chaparral habitat within the Petran (Madrean) Conifer Forest community.
Outside of this habitat community, one female paratype was collected
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in the Madrean Evergreen Woodland habitat south of La Trinidad mine, a region of steep canyons (barrancas) and ridges that is primarily oak woodland with associated pine and juniper species, and several shrubs such as Ceanothus (Rhamnaceae) and Arbutus (Ericaceae). Another paratype female (actually the first known specimen of this species) was collected in Sinaloan Thornscrub habitat between Santa Rosa and La Trinidad mine. However, this locality is a canyon bottom immediately below the Madrean Evergreen Woodland habitat occurring on the hills just above. The female probably strayed down from the latter habitat.
Coloradia prchali should be found in similar habitats in eastern So-nora and western Chihuahua in the Sierra Madre Occidental. Coloradia luski has been collected sympatrically with C. prchali, although the flight period of C. luski begins approximately two weeks later (M. Smith, unpubl. data). The surrounding Sierra Madre Occidental, east and south of the Yecora region, also supports populations of C. pandora davisi.
Collection dates for C. prchali range from 28 June to 15 August, indicating a midsummer flight. The peak flight seems to be early July, coinciding with the beginning of the annual monsoon rains. Since 1983, a total of five males and over 50 females (including non-paratype females) have been collected at UV and MV light. Field studies in 1991 resulted in males being attracted to virgin female C. prchali, indicating that males of this species are diurnal, flying between 0900 and 1500 h (J. Brock & S. Prchal, pers. comm.). This diurnal flight habit is unusual for the genus. Coloradia pandora lindseyi Barnes & Benjamin was reported as a day flier by Patterson (1929); Schmid and Bennett (1988) and Brown (1984) reported C. pandora davisi flying in the daytime during years of unusual abundance.
The larval stages of C. prchali have not been observed in nature; however, larvae of this species have been reared in captivity on various Pinus species (Pinaceae) by several workers. The life history of C. prchali will be the subject of a later paper by K. Wolfe of Escondido, California.
Discussion. The genus Coloradia Blake, 1863, with type-species Coloradia pandora Blake, 1863, by original designation (Fletcher & Nye 1982), occupies the western half of the United States, ranging as far north as Wyoming and South Dakota (Ferguson 1971), and south to at least Oaxaca and Chiapas in southern Mexico (K. Wolfe, pers. comm.). Four species occur in the United States: C. pandora, C. doris Barnes, C. luski, and C. velda Johnson & Walter (Ferguson 1983, Johnson & Walter 1979). Beutelspacher (1978) cited only three species from Mexico, all endemics: C. euphrosyne Dyar, C. vazquezae Beutelspacher, and C. hoffmanni Beutelspacher, although Hoffmann (1942) also listed
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C. pandora from Sinaloa. Since the 1978 revision by Beutelspacher, C. luski and C. p. davisi have been found in northern Mexico (specimens at Univ. California Davis, in the collection of T. Sears from southwestern Chihuahua) and C. pandora (probably subspecies lindseyi) has been confirmed from Baja California Norte (Johnson & Walter 1979). This description of Coloradia prchali brings the number of Coloradia species known from Mexico to six.
Acknowledgments
We thank Steve Prchal for bringing this species to our attention. We also thank the collectors who generously shared their specimens and locality data with us: Jim Brock, John Palting, Ray Nagle, Markus Lindberg, Keith Koppos, Michael Wilson, Doug Mullins, and Bob Weich, all of Tucson, Arizona; Peter Jump and Scott McCleve, Douglas, Arizona; and Ken Hansen, Eureka, California. We thank the many other collectors who have been part of the collecting trips to this region, under the loose guise of the Sonoran Lepidoptera Survey. We especially thank Jim Brock and Doug Mullins for spearheading the efforts to gather data and specimens for study. Kirby Wolfe provided held data on Mexican Coloradia. Steve Stone took the color photographs of the type specimens. Julian Donahue of the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County reviewed the manuscript and offered helpful suggestions. We thank two anonymous reviewers for their comments and suggestions.
Literature Cited
Beutelspacher B., C. R. 1978. Revision del genero Coloradia Blake (Lepidoptera:
Saturniidae) para Mexico con descripcion de dos especies nuevas. An. Inst. Biol. Univ.
Nat. Auton. Mexico 49, Ser. Zoologia (l):231-240. Brown, D. E. (ed.). 1982. Biotic communities of the American Southwest—United
States and Mexico. Desert Plants 4:1-342. Brown, L. N. 1984. Population outbreaks of Pandora Moths (Coloradia pandora Blake)
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Opler, P. A. 1986. A new Euchloe (Pieridae) from northwestern Mexico. J. Lepid. Soc. 40:188-190.
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Received for publication 23 December 1990; revised and accepted 11 April 1992.