Matskási István (szerk.): A Magyar Természettudományi Múzeum évkönyve 89. (Budapest 1997)
Bálint, Zs. ; Johnson, K.: New species of Cyanophrys sensu lato from the Andean region of Argentina (Lepidoptera: Lycaenidae)
gentina are more divergent in wing pattern than most members of the genus. Accordingly, the purpose of the present paper is to describe these new entities so they can be properly monitored in future biological work concerning the region. We employ the generic taxonomy of JOHNSON et al. (1993) and descriptive terminology of JOHNSON et al. (1988, 1990). For descriptive convenience we employ the "common usage" species groups originating with CLENCH (1944, 1946). We use the abbreviations DFW, DHW and VFW, VHW for dorsal and ventral fore- and hindwings, respectively. For consistency, we conform primary types to the specimen originally so-labelled by JOHNSON ( 1 980), using subsequently added material as paratypes. As appropriate we use original unpublished names of JOHNSON (1980) except whereas noted in Remarks. Institutional abbreviations (alphabetical order) are as follows: AMNH, American Museum of Natural History; BMNH, The Natural History Museum, London; FSCA, Florida State Collection of Arthropods; HNHM, Hungarian Natural History Museum; IML, Instituto Miguel Lillo (Tucumán,, Argentina); MCZ, Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University; and MNHN, Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle, Paris. Private collections are individually noted. Figs 1-2. Comparative maps of northern Argentina (64 W longitude, 27 S latitude for orientation). 1 = Provinces of Jujuy (J), Salta (S), Tucumán (T), and Catamarca (C) in relation to dotted locations of recent sampling by lepidoperists (Johnson et al. 1988, 1990). 2 = Areas of Fig. 1. (as in South America inset): shaded distribution of tropical and subtropical forest extending southward into northern Argentina. Tropical forests (APN 1987), including northward, "la selva subtropical de montana" (SSB, from Santa Cruz area of Bolivia down the Andes through Jujuy and into Salta) and, southward, a subtropical satellite "la selva Tucumáno-boliviana" (STB, including the "frost free island" of Tucumán and areas of eastern Catamarca Province)