Published May 12, 2009 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Dodia albertae Dyar

  • 1. B- 46 Ae- 9402 -
  • 2. FBB

Description

Dodia albertae Dyar

Figs. 1, 4, 6, 8

Dodia albertae Dyar, 1901: 85.

Hypocrita atra A. Bang-Haas, 1912: 109.

Hyperborea kozhantshikovi Sheljuzhko, 1918: 104.

Dodia albertae eudiopta Tshistjakov, 1988: 638, fig. 5; subspecies.

Type material. Dodia albertae – Type locality: “Calgary, Alberta, [Canada], head of Pine Creek.” Male lectotype designated by Tshistjakov and Lafontaine (1984), USNM type No. 5747 [USNM, photograph examined].

Hipocrita atra – Type locality: “Arasagun-gol (Sajan)” according to original description, label on lectotype reads “Arasagun-go / Sajan” [Sayan Mountain range, Mongolia]. Male lectotype designated by Tshistjakov and Lafontaine (1984) [ZMHB, photograph examined]. Note – Hipocrita is an incorrect subsequent spelling of Hypocrita Hübner, [1807].

Hyperborea kozhantshikovi – Type locality: “in montes Dzhugdzhuz [Dzhugdzhur], ad flum. Dzhelinda” [Dzhugdzhur Mountains, Dzhelinda River, eastern Siberia; near the head of the Aldan River according to Tschistjakov (1988)]. Described from 1 male and 1 female syntype; male lectotype (and four paralectotypes) designated by Tshistjakov and Lafontaine (1984) [ZIN, genitalia slide no. 15,191; not examined]. Since only one male was included in the original type material, it is not clear which if any of the lectotype designations are valid. We follow Tschistjakov’s (1988) synonymy; he examined a genitalic preparation of the lectotype in his review of Palaearctic specimens of D. albertae, and treated kozhantshikovi as a synonym of D. albertae albertae.

Dodia albertae eudiopta Tshistjakov, 1988 – Type locality: [Olenek River between lower Tomba and Alakit River, Russia]. Holotype male [ZIN; not examined]. The diagnosis and genitalic illustration of this taxon in the original description clearly show that it is more closely allied to D. albertae than to the new species described below.

Diagnosis. See species key, and diagnosis of D. tarandus.

Distribution and biology. Dodia albertae is widely distributed across the northern hemisphere in wet subarctic and subalpine tundra and boreal peat bog habitats (Fig. 9). In Eurasia it occurs from the Sayan Mountains eastward to eastern Siberia. In North America, it is distributed from the Yukon eastward to Labrador (Fig. 8).

Notes

Published as part of Schmidt, Christian & Macaulay, Douglas, 2009, A new species of Dodia Dyar (Noctuidae, Arctiinae) from central Canada, pp. 79-88 in ZooKeys 9 (9) on pages 81-83, DOI: 10.3897/zookeys.9.150, http://zenodo.org/record/576453

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Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

Family
Arctiidae
Genus
Dodia
Kingdom
Animalia
Order
Lepidoptera
Phylum
Arthropoda
Scientific name authorship
Dyar
Species
albertae
Taxon rank
species
Type status
holotype , lectotype , syntype

References

  • Dyar HG (1901) Diagnosis of a new arctian. Journal of the New York Entomological Society 9: 85.
  • Bang-Haas A (1912) Neue oder wenig bekannte palaearktische makrolepidopteren. IV. Deutsche Entomologische Zeitschrift Iris 26: 103 - 110.
  • Sheljuzhko AL (1918). Diagnoses lepidopterorum novorum Sibiriae. Neue Beitrage zur Systematischen Insektenkunde 1: 104.
  • Tshistjakov YA (1988) Tiger moths of the genus Dodia Dyar, 1901 (Lepidoptera, Arctiidae) of the fauna of the USSR. Entomologicheskoe Obozrenie 67: 632 - 643. (In Russian).
  • Tshistjakov YA, Lafontaine JD (1984) A review of the genus Dodia Dyar (Lepidoptera: Artiidae) with description of a new species from eastern Siberia and northern Canada. Canadian Entomologist 116: 1549 - 1556.