Jump to content

Hemaris aethra

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hemaris aethra
Adult Hemaris aethra moth resting on a leaf in the sunlight
Adult resting on a leaf

Apparently Secure  (NatureServe)
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Family: Sphingidae
Genus: Hemaris
Species:
H. aethra
Binomial name
Hemaris aethra
(Strecker, 1875)
Synonyms
  • Macroglossa aethra Strecker, 1875[1]
  • Haemorrhagia diffinis aethra (Barnes & McDunnough, 1910)[2]
A Hemaris aethra specimen rests on a foam board in a display box. The handwritten label below it reads: "Hemaris diffinis. Snowberry hawkmoth. Atikokan, Ontario. June 21, 1981."
A Hemaris aethra specimen from the 1980s labelled as Hemaris diffinis
Colored illustration of a Hemaris aethra adult, hand-drawn on paper
Herman Strecker's illustration (pl. xiii, fig. 2), c. 1876
A large green caterpillar. It has a dark horn protruding from its tail end and a yellow band behind the head. It is crawling on the stem of a northern bush honeysuckle plant and feeding on the leaves.
Caterpillar (green morph)
Adult Hemaris aethra moth hovering to feed on nectar from a dandelion. Its proboscis is extended.
Adult nectaring on a dandelion
Adult Hemaris aethra moth hovering at a small pink flower. Its proboscis is curled.
Adult at a flower

Hemaris aethra, the Diervilla clearwing, is a moth in the family Sphingidae (subfamily Macroglossinae). It is native to the northern United States and southern Canada. Like H. diffinis, with which it shares some of its range, H. aethra is a bumblebee mimic.

After having long been treated as a subspecies of H. diffinis due to difficulty in distinguishing them morphologically, H. aethra was elevated to species status in 2018.

Etymology

[edit]

The specific name, aethra, comes from Ancient Greek Αἴθρα (romanized: Aíthra), meaning "bright sky".[3][a] Several women in Greek myth bear this name; the exact namesake Strecker had in mind is not clear.

Taxonomy

[edit]

Taxonomic history

[edit]

Strecker (1875) described the moth as Macroglossa aethra based on a female specimen from Montreal, identifying it as either a novel species or a "most remarkable aberrant form of Diffinis [sic]".[1] Within eastern diffinis, Barnes & McDunnough (1910) recognized H. diffinis aethra as a northern subspecies occurring from Maine to northern Ontario.[4]

Relationship to H. diffinis

[edit]

Schmidt (2009) barcoded the mitochondrial DNA of nominal H. diffinis specimens from eastern Ontario and found them to be two sympatric groups with diverging genes for cytochrome c oxidase.[5][6] Schmidt (2018) examined other characteristics of the two groups and determined H. d. aethra to be a new species, H. aethra, while the nominate subspecies, H. d. diffinis, was synonymized with H. diffinis. H. aethra and H. diffinis do not appear sister taxa, with the former likely being most closely related to H. thetis, the Rocky Mountain clearwing.[7] The phenotypical similarity of H. aethra and H. diffinis can be attributed to convergent evolution through co-mimicry of the same bumblebee model.[8]

Distribution and habitat

[edit]

Hemaris aethra ranges from Maine to northern Ontario, with occasional records as far west as Saskatchewan.[9] Its geographic range is moderately broad (200,000-2,500,000 square km or 80,000-1,000,000 square miles)[10] but is limited by that of Diervilla lonicera, its host plant. H. aethra is found in mesic, open deciduous forest, mostly in igneous bedrock plant communities, conditions that likely reflects the requirements of its host. In contrast, H. diffinis is found in more xeric, savannah-like habitats where its host Symphoricarpos is common.[11]

The separation distance for both unsuitable and suitable habitat is 1 kilometer.[10]

In addition to being sympatric with H. diffinis in eastern Ontario and possibly other areas,[12] aethra's range overlaps with those of H. gracilis and H. thysbe.

Description

[edit]

The H. aethra larva has multiple color forms, green being most common. It has bright red spiracles, a yellow prothoracic collar, and a caudal horn with a black apex fading to a pink-purple base; in contrast, diffinis larvae have black spiracles and the base of the caudal horn is bright yellow.[13]

Adults can be extremely difficult to tell apart from H. diffinis where they occur in sympatry, such as in eastern Ontario. Generally, aethra adults are slightly larger and more robust, and the dorsal thorax is a richer orange-brown color contrasting strongly with olive-brown dorsolateral stripes. The head is often greenish grey. The reddish-brown scaling on the apex of the forewings is generally larger and brighter red in aethra than diffinis, taking up 50% or more of the R4-R5 cell, and that on the hindwing anal margins is also more extensive.[13]

Ecology

[edit]

Like other Hemaris species, Hemaris aethra is a dayflying moth. It hovers at flowers to feed on their nectar, pollinating them in the process. Adults have been recorded nectaring on Vaccinium, Chicory, and Lonicera tatarica.[14]

The only known host plant for H. aethra larvae is the northern bush honeysuckle (Diervilla lonicera). Native Lonicera species may also be larval hosts like they are for H. diffinis, but Lonicera are typically much less common than Diervilla where H. aethra occurs.[15]

Conservation

[edit]

Threats and potential conservation needs are unknown, as are long-term and short-term population trends. As of 2024, the species is not listed as endangered under the U.S. Endangered Species Act or Canada's Species at Risk Act.[10]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Graves prefaces the index by saying, "Many of the meanings are doubtful" (p. 377).

Citations

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Strecker 1875–1876, p. 107.
  2. ^ Barnes & McDunnough 1910, p. 201.
  3. ^ Graves 1957, p. 378.
  4. ^ Barnes & McDunnough 1910, pp. 200–203.
  5. ^ Schmidt 2009.
  6. ^ Schmidt 2018, p. 33.
  7. ^ Schmidt 2018, p. 46.
  8. ^ Schmidt 2018, p. 32, 46.
  9. ^ Schmidt 2018, p. 34.
  10. ^ a b c Young 2019.
  11. ^ Schmidt 2018, pp. 34, 41.
  12. ^ Schmidt 2018, p. 41, 46.
  13. ^ a b Schmidt 2018, p. 37.
  14. ^ Schmidt 2018, p. 41.
  15. ^ Schmidt 2018, p. 40.

References

[edit]
  • Barnes, William; McDunnough, J. (1910). "List of Sphingidae of America North of Mexico". Psyche: A Journal of Entomology. 17 (5): 190–206. doi:10.1155/1910/54904. eISSN 1687-7438. ISSN 0033-2615.
[edit]