Matskási István (szerk.): A Magyar Természettudományi Múzeum évkönyve 97. (Budapest 2005)
Bálint, Zs.: A review of the Neotropical hairstreak genus Annamaria with notes on further genera (Lepidoptera: Lycaenidae)
very with bright green scaling in costal and apical areas, scent pad veil visible. Hind wing ventrum ground colour bright blue with green basal scaling and with pattern of complex system of intercellular black blothches, cell Rs empty. Androconia: Dorsal fore wing discal cell with rhomboid shaped scent pad situated in apical area; intercellular spaces from vein R3 to CuA2 with joining scent patches (Fig. 26). Legs: Generally femur, tibia and tarsus bright blue with white scalings; fore leg femur and tibia, and coxa and tarsus appr. with same length, tibia with a pair of black apical spurs, tarsus with long sets of lateral puvillae and a single, brown apical claw. Abdomen: dorsally bright azure blue, ventrally bright blue. Copulatory organ: Saccus very long with vinculum length, vinculum strong and relatively broad, valva shorter than sacculus with a distal process with half valval length and very long setae, tegumen sclerotized, appendix angularis large with central straight sclerotized ridge fusing with a sclerotized flat Y-shaped fultura superior around aedeagal tube, commonplace eumaeine uncus and gnathos large and heavily sclerotized, aedeagus very long with almost two times longer than saccus+valva length, distal aedeagus membranous and open with dorsal and ventral cornutus; dorsal cornutus terminally sclerotized and pointed, ventral cornutus mebranous and flat (Fig. 31 ). Female. Unknown (see Remarks). Etymology - The name was chosen in rhyme with the sister species name rhaptissima. It is also an indication of the individuality of the specimen serving as holotype, as in the original meaning of the Greek word. Remarks - Even though the condition of the holotype is not perfect, I establish a new Annamaria species group taxon on the basis of the holotype specimen because the large series of A. draudti and the short series of A. ganimedes specimens I examined (see below) show a qualitative consistency in wide individual variations regarding male androconial patches (Figs 25-30). Accordingly, the presence and absence of androconia in the sister lineage of ganimedes also indicates distinctness at the species level supported by additional features. Annamaria draudti (LATHY, 1926) D'ABRERA et BÁLINT, 2001 (Figs 8-11,27-29, 32) Thecla nobilis (HERRICH-SCHÄFFER): GODMAN & SALVIN 1887: 12-13, "Guatemala: Rio Chisoy; Nicaragua: Chontales; Panama: Chiriqui, Bugaba, Calobre; Colombia", PI. 48, figs 20 (Guatemala male dorsum), 21 (Guatemala male ventrum), 22 (Panama female dorsum); misidentification. Thecla draudti LATHY, 1926: 40, "Columbia and Central America"; LATHY 1930: 137, pl. IX, fig. 10 (male dorsum, ventrum), "Colombia". JOHNSON 1991: 144, "Columbia", lectoype designation. Thecla godmani GOODSON, 1945: 169, "Chisoy Valley, Guatemala", holotype male (figured in GODMAN & SALVIN 1887: PI. 48, fig. 20 and in D'ABRERA 1995: 1107, fig. "£. goamanC). BÁLINT 2005: 362, as new synonym of Annamária draudti. Evenus godmanni (GOODSON): D'ABRERA 1995: 1106, "Guatemala", 1107, figs "E. godmanni", subsequent misspelling.