Lamasina

Lamasina
Lamasina ganimedes type specimen
from above (left) and below
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Family: Lycaenidae
Subfamily: Theclinae
Tribe: Eumaeini
Genus: Lamasina (disputed)
Robbins, 2002
Species

3-5, but see text

Synonyms

[1]
Annamaria D'Abrera & Bálint, 2001 (may be nomen nudum)
Eucharia Boisduval, 1870 (non Hübner, [1820]: preoccupied)

Lamasina is a genus of gossamer-winged butterflies (family Lycaenidae); the validity of its name is subject to dispute. Among its family, these sexually dimorphic Lepidoptera belong to the tribe Eumaeini of the subfamily Theclinae. Lamasina species are found mainly in northern South America, approximately to the Guyanas. L. draudti is also found in Central America south of the Yucatán Peninsula. In the Andes, the genus extends somewhat further south; L. rhaptissima almost reaches Bolivia.[2]

The genus name has changed two times since the year 2000 for technical reasons. The question which name is correct is not yet fully resolved, though Lamasina seems to be the preferred one.[3]

Description

See also Glossary of Lepidopteran terms.

They show some similarity to Evenus (probably a close relative) and Paiwarria (probably a slightly more distinct member of the Eumaeini). But whether Lamasina is in fact a close relative of the former is not thoroughly studied. The upperwings of Lamasina males and females are bluish, with broad black margins which are broader in females. The underwings are greenish to brown, with a striped or mottled pattern that distinguishes males from females. In some, the males have blue forewing undersides also.[3]

Lamasina has a fairly short forewing cell, measuring less than one-half of the costal length and in males only about one-third. In some Lamasina males, androconia ("perfume" scales) form a characteristic orange or darkened patch on the dorsal forewing. There is a lobed tail at the hindwing tomus in some species. Together with the structure of the genitalia, members of this genus can thus be unequivocally recognized by this combination of characters, though most of these features are also found in other Eumaeini.[3]

Classification

The genus used to be known as Eucharia, established by Boisduval in 1870, but that name had earlier been proposed for a genus of arctiid moths already. The first attempt to establish a replacement name may have failed on technical grounds; the name chosen, Annamaria, was subsequently argued to be a nomen nudum per Article 13.1 of the ICZN Code, because an appropriate genus description was not given. Lamasina was validly established in 2002, but if "Annamaria" is valid after all, Lamasina is its junior synonym. The matter has been submitted to the ICZN for discussion.[4]

Species

3-5 species are currently accepted as valid. While L. saphonota might not belong into this genus (it was placed variously in Brevianta and Denivia in the past), L. ganimedes and L. rhaptissima might be cryptic species complexes.[4]

Footnotes

  1. See references in Savela (2011)
  2. Robbins & Lamas (2008), and see references in Savela (2011)
  3. 1 2 3 Robbins & Lamas (2008)
  4. 1 2 Brower (2008), Robbins & Lamas (2008), and see references in Savela (2011)

References

See also

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