Abstract
Hermeuptychia intricata Grishin, sp. n. is described from the Brazos Bend State Park in Texas, United States, where it flies synchronously with Hermeuptychia sosybius (Fabricius, 1793). The two species differ strongly in both male and female genitalia and exhibit 3.5% difference in the COI barcode sequence of mitochondrial DNA. Setting such significant genitalic and genotypic differences aside, we were not able to find reliable wing pattern characters to tell a difference between the two species. This superficial similarity may explain why H. intricata, only distantly related to H. sosybius, has remained unnoticed until now, despite being widely distributed in the coastal plains from South Carolina to Texas, USA (and possibly to Costa Rica). Obscuring the presence of a cryptic species even further, wing patterns are variable in both butterflies and ventral eyespots vary from large to almost absent. To avoid confusion with the new species, neotype for Papilio sosybius Fabricius, 1793, a common butterfly that occurs across northeast US, is designated from Savannah, Georgia, USA. It secures the universally accepted traditional usage of this name. Furthermore, we find that DNA barcodes of Hermeuptychia specimens from the US, even those from extreme south Texas, are at least 4% different from those of H. hermes (Fabricius, 1775)—type locality Brazil: Rio de Janeiro—and suggest that the name H. hermes should not be used for USA populations, but rather reserved for the South American species. This conclusion is further supported by comparison of male genitalia. However, facies, genitalia and 2.1% different DNA barcodes set Hermeuptychia populations in the lower Rio Grande Valley of Texas apart from H. sosybius. These southern populations, also found in northeastern Mexico, are described here as Hermeuptychia hermybius Grishin, sp. n. (type locality Texas: Cameron County). While being phylogenetically closer to H. sosybius than to any other Hermeuptychia species, H. hermybius can usually be recognized by wing patterns, such as the size of eyespots and the shape of brown lines on hindwing. “Intricate Satyr” and “South Texas Satyr” are proposed as the English names for H. intricata and H. hermybius, respectively.
Highlights
What could be more exciting than a discovery of a new butterfly species? Perhaps the discovery of a butterfly species in the US that was long overlooked, completely unexpected, and has closest named relatives far away in Bolivia and Brazil
The genus Hermeuptychia was proposed by Forster (1964) on the basis of male genitalia to circumscribe a group of close relatives hardly separable by highly variable wing patterns, but distinct in male genitalia
We find that DNA barcodes of Hermeuptychia from the lower Rio Grande Valley region of Texas (Webb, Zapata, Starr, Hidalgo, and Cameron Counties) form a tight cluster and differ by at least 2% from the barcodes of over 50 H. sosybius specimens across its range from North Carolina to Texas
Summary
Perhaps the discovery of a butterfly species in the US that was long overlooked, completely unexpected, and has closest named relatives far away in Bolivia and Brazil. These finds may not be easy to come by, because most of such species are cryptic and appear superficially similar to their more common and well-known relatives. All Hermeuptychia specimens from the US (North Carolina, Tennessee and Florida) used by Seraphim et al (2014) possessed similar DNA barcode sequences and were assigned to morphogroup 4 by male genitalia
Published Version (Free)
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have