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Spodoptera mauritia (Boisduval) and S. triturata (Walker), two distinct Species

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 July 2009

D. S. Fletcher
Affiliation:
Dept. of Entomology, British Museum (Natural History).

Extract

In working out a collection of Heterocera made by J. D. Bradley in the Solomon Islands, preparations were made of the genitalia of specimens of Spodoptera mauritia (Boisd.) and they were found to differ from those of African specimens, with which they were compared. Subsequent study of the material in the British Museum has shown that two species have been confused under the one name; S. mauritia, which occurs in Madagascar, Mauritius, the Comoro Islands and from India to the Pacific and which is known from continental Africa from only a single female taken at Lindi on the coast of Tanganyika, and the second species, S. triturata (Wlk.), which occurs throughout continental Africa, south of the Sahara Desert. As both species are of economic importance, it has been decided to describe their differences in a separate paper rather than include them in the faunistic paper dealing with the Heterocera of Eennell Island.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1957

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