identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
03E6BA19FFE3FF97A0A8FF04AC7CFC04.text	03E6BA19FFE3FF97A0A8FF04AC7CFC04.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Euxoa (Pleonectopoda) steideli Kononenko & Behounek & Gyulai 2018	<div><p>Euxoa (Pleonectopoda) steideli sp. n.</p><p>(Figs 1–6, 10–12, 21–28, 42–44)</p><p>Type material. Holotype: male, labeled (in German): “NE Russia W Buryatia, Sayangeb. 400 km W Baikal-See, 24 km nr. Sagan-Shuluta a. Irkuta. 51°(53–55) 36′N, 100°43–46′E 9-14.vii.2012 /NN 1850–1950 m, leg. A. Steidel, u. Gruppe ” [Russia, west of Buryatia Autonomic Respublic, Tunkinsky reg., 24 km from Sagan-Shuluta village, East Sayan Range, 1850–1950 m], slide GB 8446, coll. GB/ ZSM .</p><p>Paratypes: 2 males, same data, slide GB 8237, coll. GB/ ZSM; 8 males 14.vii.2012, same locality and collectors (coll. HSW). The holotype and one paratype mentioned above are preserve in the collection of Gottfried Behounek (Grafing, near Munich, Germany), later to be deposited in ZSM . 1 male, Russia, Tuva, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=96.0&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=50.133335" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 96.0/lat 50.133335)">Naryn river</a> 50°08′N, 96°00′E, 1450 m, NN, 6.vii.1996 , leg. J.Krüger, coll. PG, slide PG 730. 1 male (with red brown forewing), labeled as “Russland-Sibirien, Mondy [Russia, Siberia, Buryatia, Mondy] 1887 m, 54°.36.8′ N, 100°45.41,5′E, 6–14. 0 7. 2012, Klaus Metz ”, coll. PG, slide PG 3347 . 1 male, South Siberia, Chita reg. Kuka vill., 25.v.–10.vi.1999, leg. Chech collector., coll. PG, genitalia slide PG 3424. The series of the paratypes preserve in the collection of Peter Gyulai (Miskolc, Hungary) . 1 male, Russia, South Siberia, Tuva, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=96.25&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=50.216667" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 96.25/lat 50.216667)">Naryn River</a> / <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=96.25&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=50.216667" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 96.25/lat 50.216667)">Arzhan</a>, 50°13′N, 96°15′E, 1900 m, 24–26.vi.1996, leg. J. Krüger ; 1 male same locality, 50°08′N 96°00′E, 1450 m, 6.vii.1996, leg. J.Krüger; 1 male, same locality, 50° 08′N 96° 00′E, 1450 m, 6.vii.1996, leg. A.Saldaitis (Coll. ZFMK).</p><p>Diagnosis. The new species externally looks very similar to Euxoa muldersi Lafontaine &amp; Troubridge, 2010 (Figs 16, 17), recently described from Canada. It differs from the latter in its larger size (forewing length 19–20 mm vs 13–15 mm in E. muldersi), sharper and less blackish forewing pattern, usually with ash-grey background and very light-brown shading, paler basally, with the terminal band more expressed on the hindwing, and normally developed eyes (reduced in E. muldersi). The male genitalia of E. steideli (Figs 42–44) differ from those of E. muldersi in the shape of the valva, which is less narrow basally, and with a longer and somewhat narrower saccular extension, nearly equal to the harpe (sensu Forbes 1954) in length, and a larger sub-basal diverticulum. Among the Palaearctic species, E. steideli is most similar to E. hyperborea Lafontaine (Fig. 20, 41, 49), from which it differs by more variable wing pattern and coloration and by the structure of the male genitalia, particularly the shape of the valva, which is constricted basally and somewhat extended distally, the narrower harpe-saccular extension complex, and the less well developed medial extension of the vesica.</p><p>Description. Adult (Figs 1–6, 10–12, 21–28). Wingspan 39–43 mm, length of forewing 19–20 mm. Frons with elongate, conical, slightly rojecting dorsally tubercle; eyes round; male antenna shortly biserrate, with segments about 1.3× as wide as shaft, with bristle on each segment; first segment of antennae with ring of white scales. Head and thorax covered with white, grey and black hair-like and strap-like scales, usually covering the frontal tubercle. Thorax dorsally covered with yellowish–grey hair-like scale; abdomen covered with pale grey or reddish-grey scales. Tibiae armed with one row of spines on each leg, typical for Euxoa . Forewing narrow, elongate; ground colour in most cases pale ash grey with a mixture of brown and black scales; darker greyish brown, olive brown or reddish brown in medial, subterminal and terminal areas. Wing pattern ground plan typical for Euxoa, formed by basal, antemedial, postmedial and subterminal lines, a basal dash, orbicular, reniform and claviform stigmata. Basal and subbasal fields in most cases ash grey, the basal line prounounced in the costal area; basal streak distinct, or diffuse; antemedial line dentate, greyish, outlined with black; medial field darker than ante- and postmedial fields, greyish brown, olive brown or reddish brown, bearing pale scales, outlined by blackish scales and sometimes darker in the centre of the orbicular, reniform and claviform stigmata; postmedial line dentate along veins; postmedial field paler than medial field, with pale-grey suffusion along veins and blackish or greyish dashes between veins; subterminal line pale, thin, diffuse; terminal field dark grey or yellowish grey, pale along veins; terminal line as a row or blackish vertical streaks, interrupted opposite veins; fringe yellowish-grey with black scales. Hindwing pale, yellowish-grey, with distinct discal spot, dark-grey veins and broad greyish with pale yellowish scales on terminal band; fringe pale yellowish grey. Underside forewing pale grey, with distinct reniform, broad diffused postmedial band and marked subterminal band; hindwing pale yellowish grey shadowed with grey along costal margin, with distinct discal spot, wide blackish postmedial band and darker yellowish-grey terminal band; fringe yellowish.</p><p>Variability. E. steideli is rather variable by wing coloration and pattern. Most specimens collected in the upper Irkut valley (Sagan-Shuluta) have ash-grey wings and body (Figs 1–3, 21–24), similar to E. muldersi . Beside these typical ash-grey specimens with differentiated wing pattern elements, one examined male specimen has reddishbrown ground forewing colouration with the subcostal area and veins suffused with grey scales, a dark-brown subbasal field, and the main wing pattern elements brown (Figs 3, 24). The specimens from Tuva populations have dull-grey or reddish-grey wing colouration with non-contrast the main elements visible as or thin borders (Figs 4–6, 25–28) (ante- and post medial lines, orbicular and reniform stigmata represented by thin, sometimes indistinct lines or by pale, dentate borders).</p><p>Male genitalia. (Figs 42, 43). Similar to those of E. muldersi (Fig. 40) in most details, but valva somewhat broader; saccular extensions thinner and longer, left extension is almost equal to harpe in length and slightly thinner; the angle between harpe and saccular extension broader; subbasal diverticulum in vesica larger, medial diverticulum smaller. Compared with E. hyperborea, it differs by the shape of valva more constricted basally and markedly extended distally, rounded cucullus and narrower harpe – saccular extension complex and less developed medial extension of vesica in the aedeagus.</p><p>Female unknown.</p><p>Etymology. The species is named for German geologist and insect collector Axel Steidel who collected the species in the Sayan Mts. (upper reach of Irkut River) in South Siberia and brought it to the attention of authors.</p><p>Distribution and bionomics (Fig. 39). The species is known only from mountains of South Siberia: Russia, Tuva, Naryn River valley; southwest of Buryatia, Tunkinsky region, East Sayan Range, upper reach of Irkut River, near Sagan-Shuluta village; Mondy village; south Transbaikalia, Kuka village. Specimens were collected by light in the montane steppe, and river banks at elevation 1850–1950 m. Larva and larval biology unknown.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E6BA19FFE3FF97A0A8FF04AC7CFC04	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Kononenko, V. S.;Behounek, G.;Gyulai, P.	Kononenko, V. S., Behounek, G., Gyulai, P. (2018): Descriptions of two new species of Euxoa Hübner, [1821], subgenus Pleonectopoda Grote, 1873, from Siberia (Lepidoptera, Noctuidae). Zootaxa 4483 (2): 258-270, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4483.2.2
03E6BA19FFE2FF90A0A8FC0EAA78F80C.text	03E6BA19FFE2FF90A0A8FC0EAA78F80C.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Euxoa (Pleonectopoda) kodara Kononenko & Behounek & Gyulai 2018	<div><p>Euxoa (Pleonectopoda) kodara sp. n.</p><p>(Figs 7–9, 13–15, 29–34, 45–47, 50)</p><p>Type material. Holotype: male, labeled as “ Russia, North Baikal, Kodar Mts. 1100 m 17.vi.–14.vii.1999, leg. Danilevsky,” Genitalia slide PG 3344m. The holotype preserved in coll. of Peter Gyulai, Miskolc, Hungary, later to be deposited in HNHM .</p><p>Paratypes. Total 28 specimens. 6 males, 7 females, Russia, Siberia, Chitinskaya oblast, Kalarsky region, Station Kodar, Kodar Range H= 1000 m, 27.vi–17.vii.1999, leg. A. Aniskovich (coll. ABr.), male slide GB 8468 (coll. GB/ ZSM); female slide GB 88469 (coll. GB/ ZSM) ; 1 male, Russia, Yakutia, Kodar Range, BAM station <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=119.916664&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=119.916664" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 119.916664/lat 119.916664)">Chani</a>, 56° 66′ N 119° 55′ E, H= 600–800 m, 19.vi–8.vii.2000, leg. A. Aniskovich (coll. ABR) ; 1 male, Russia, Transbaikalia, Stanovoe Plateu, 900 m, near Kodar RW Station, 3–26.vi.2001, leg. O. Amossov (coll. WS) ; 5 males, 1 female, Russia, Siberia, Chitinskaya oblast, Kalarsky region, 56° 41′ N 117° 43′, Station Kodar, Kodar Range H = 1000 m, 10.vi–10.vii.2001, leg. A. Aniskovich (coll. ABr.) ; 1 male, 1 female North Baikal Kodar mts. 1100 m 17.vi. –14.vii.1999 leg. Danilevsky, coll. FH ; 1 male, 1 female, same data, coll. HS, slide PG 4436f; 1 female, Russia, Yakutia, Verkhoyansk, vi.1913, leg. Mikhailov (ZISP) ; 1 female, Russia, Amur basin, Khabarovsk region, Bureinsky nature reserve, Upper Bureya, Busse-Alin range, Korbokon Range, 28.vi.2011, leg. E. Koshkin (IBSS).</p><p>Diagnosis. The new species is most similar to E. hyperborea (Figs 20, 41, 13–15), from which it differs in its larger size (forewing length 18–21 mm vs 16–20 mm in E. hyperborea), more strongly developed, broad frontal tubercle (vestigial in E. hyperborea), the forewing slightly rounded apically, shining bluish-grey or reddish-brown ground colour of forewing, and more pronounced patterning on the forewing. The male genitalia of E. kodara differ from those of E. hyperborea in the somewhat broader valva, a more stout saccular extension, and, in most of the specimens, a slightly longer sacculus and less ample subbasal diverticulum. The male genitalia of E. kodara are also similar to those of E. steideli, but differ in the broader valva and shorter sacculus. In the female genitalia E. kodara basically resembles to E. hyperborea, but the appendix bursae is more prominent, projected apically; sclerotised plate of ductus bursae much wider than in E. hyperborea .</p><p>Description. Adult (Figs 7–9, 13–15, 29–34). Wingspan 36–46 38 mm, length of forewing 18–21 mm, female somewhat larger than male. Dimorphic, with both sexes represented by both reddish-brown and dark-grey forms. Frons with small but distinct, wrinkled plate-like tubercle; eyes round; male antenna thicker than in related E. hyperborea and E. steideli, biserrate, fasciculate, with bundle of bristles on each segment. Head and thorax covered with white, grey black or reddish-brown hair-like and strap-like scales, usually also covering frontal tubercle; abdomen covered with dark-grey or reddish-brown scales. Legs with tibia armed with row of spines typical for Euxoa . Forewing broad, rounded. Ground colour ash grey with metallic shining in fresh specimens (in the grey form) or reddish-brown (in the brown form). Wing pattern reduced, formed by faint basal and usually distinct antemedial, postmedial, and subterminal lines, faint orbicular and distinct reniform stigmata; claviform stigma not expressed. Basal, subbasal, and medial fields concolorous; basal line faint in costal area or not expressed; antemedial line distinct, blackish, outlined inwardly with pale dashes; medial shadow ranges from robust to faint or invisible; orbicular stigma rounded, faint, pale yellowish or grey; reniform stigma narrow, more or less C-like, black or dark brown inside, outlined with narrow yellowish border more prominently expressed in reddish form; postmedial line thin, dentate, in some specimens reduced but well expressed and with a pale outer border in others; subterminal field rather broad, unicolourous; subterminal line either blackish with a diffuse yellowish outward border, or expressed as a series of dark-grey diffused streaks, or as a faint outline; terminal field grey, in reddish form darker than subterminal; terminal line a row of dots or vertical streaks; fringe grey, grey brown or reddish brown. Hindwing grey or yellowish grey, pale in inner part, with distinct discal spot, dark veins, and broad greyish diffused terminal area; fringe pale yellowish grey. Underside grey, with distinct reniform and wide diffused postmedial band; hindwing grey, shadowed with dark grey along costal margin, with distinct discal spot and wide, blackish postmedial band.</p><p>Male genitalia. (Figs 45–47). Similar to those of E. hyperborea and E. steideli in most details, but valva somewhat broader than in E. hyperborea; saccular extensions slightly longer than in E. hyperborea in most of examined specimens, left extension is slightly asymmetrical, shorter than right one, both saccular extensions are shorter than the harpe; in vesica and medial diverticula smaller, less ample than in E. hyperborea .</p><p>Female genitalia. (Fig. 50) Typical for Euxoa, Pleonectopoda species. Ovipositor elongate, acute; papillae anales covered with short setae; apophyses wide at base, elongate, apophyses posteriores broad, short, four times shorter than anterior apophyses; antrum blunt, rounded laterally; ductus bursae with broad sclerotised plate; corpus bursae sack-like with wide, apical appendix bursae; ductus seminalis deriving from appendix bursae.</p><p>Etymology. The species is named after its type locality in the Kodar Range in Northern Transbaikalia (Russia, Tschita reg.).</p><p>Distribution and bionomics (Fig. 39). East Palaearctic, boreal. The species is known from a large series from the type locality, Kodar Range, in North Transbaikalia; one female found in an old collection (coll. ZISP, 1913) from Verkhoyansk, Yakutia and one female was collected in Bureya Range in the north of the Amur bassin. The species occurs in subarctic habitats near timberline at 800–1100 m with scattered low-growing larch trees, montane meadows, and montane tundra. Larva and larval biology unknown.</p><p>Euxoa (Pleonectopoda) hyperborea Lafontaine, 1987</p><p>(Figs 20, 41, 49)</p><p>Moths of North America North of Mexico, 27. 2: 46, pl. 1: 40. Type-locality: Alaska, Gubik Gas Field, Chandler River. Holotype male: USNM, washington.</p><p>References: Lafontaine 1987, 46, Pl.1:40 ( Euxoa, Pleonectopoda); Kononenko, in P.A.Lehr (ed.) 2003: 574, Pls. 332: 11–12: 586: 338: 5 ( Euxoa, Pleonectopoda); Kononenko 2005: 176 ( Euxoa, Pleonectopoda).</p><p>Note. The type-series of this species includes two males (holotype and paratype) from Alaska, and seven paratypes from Russia: one male from Chukotka, Ust Chaun 68° 74N, 170° 35E (K.W. Philip leg.) and five males, one female from Magadan region, Upper Kolyma, 18 km N Kulu (Marchenko leg.). More material was collected by Kononenko in Upper Kolyma at some locality. Moths flying at night and at day time on the sunny gravel slope. The species is associated with dry sunny dunes and dry sunny gravel slopes.</p><p>Distribution. Holarctic Beringinan. Russia, Northeast Siberia (Magadan region and Chukotka); North America (Canada: Northwest Territories, USA: Alaska).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E6BA19FFE2FF90A0A8FC0EAA78F80C	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Kononenko, V. S.;Behounek, G.;Gyulai, P.	Kononenko, V. S., Behounek, G., Gyulai, P. (2018): Descriptions of two new species of Euxoa Hübner, [1821], subgenus Pleonectopoda Grote, 1873, from Siberia (Lepidoptera, Noctuidae). Zootaxa 4483 (2): 258-270, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4483.2.2
03E6BA19FFEBFF9EA0A8FF4DAB15FD44.text	03E6BA19FFEBFF9EA0A8FF4DAB15FD44.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Euxoa (Pleonectopoda) churchillensis (Mcdunnough 1932)	<div><p>Euxoa (Pleonectopoda) churchillensis (Mcdunnough, 1932)</p><p>(Figs 18, 19)</p><p>Agrotiphila churchillensis Mcdunnough, 1932, Canadian entomologist 64: 105. Type-locality: Manitoba, Churchill. Holotype: CNC, Ottawa.</p><p>References: Hardwick 1970: 107, fig. 293 ( Euxoa, Pleonectopoda); Kononenko, Lafontaine &amp; Mikkola 1996: 92 ( Euxoa); Lafontaine &amp; Troubridge 2010: 258, figs. 5–7 ( Euxoa, Pleonectopoda).</p><p>Note. Euxoa churchillensis has been reported for Russia from Taimyr (Kononenko et al. 1996). The species is reported here for Northeast Siberia (Chukotka) for the first time on the basis of single female specimen from ZISP, labeled [Russia], “ Chukotka, Z.[zaliv] Geka, 18.vii. [19]33. Portenko ” – [Chukotka, Gek Bay in mouth of Anadyr Rives. 18.vii.1933, leg. Portenko] .</p><p>Distribution. Russian and Canadian Arctic (Beringian) and western United States. Russia, Krasnoyarsk terr., Taimyr peninsula, Chukotka, mouth of Anadyr River; North America: Canada, Hudson Bay, Nunavut, Isl. Austin, North West Territories, Prov. Manitoba, Prov. Ontario [extreme northern Ontario]; USA, Pennsylvania Mountain, Colorado; New Mexico [alpine habitats].</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E6BA19FFEBFF9EA0A8FF4DAB15FD44	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Kononenko, V. S.;Behounek, G.;Gyulai, P.	Kononenko, V. S., Behounek, G., Gyulai, P. (2018): Descriptions of two new species of Euxoa Hübner, [1821], subgenus Pleonectopoda Grote, 1873, from Siberia (Lepidoptera, Noctuidae). Zootaxa 4483 (2): 258-270, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4483.2.2
03E6BA19FFEBFF9EA0A8FCDCA859F983.text	03E6BA19FFEBFF9EA0A8FCDCA859F983.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Euxoa (Pleonectopoda) culminicola (Staudinger 1870)	<div><p>Euxoa (Pleonectopoda) culminicola (Staudinger, 1870)</p><p>(Figs 35, 36, 49, 51)</p><p>Agrotis culminicola Staudinger, 1870, Berliner entomologische Zeitschrift 1870: 107. Type-locality "Monte Rosa." Syntypes: MNHU, Berlin.</p><p>References: Warren 1909–1914: 30, Pl. 6 row e ( Euxoa); Hampson 1903: 241, ( Euxoa); Bang-Haas 1922: 36, Pl. 9: 12 ( Euxoa); Corti &amp; Draudt 1931 –1938: 28, ( Euxoa); Fibiger 1990: 64, Pl. 6: 32, 33, ( Euxoa, Pleonectopoda); Fibiger 1997: 67, fig. 43 ( Euxoa, Euxoa) Fibiger et al. 2011: 42 ( Euxoa, Euxoa).</p><p>Note. The species was placed by Fibiger (1993) in the subgenus Pleonectopoda, but later it was moved to the subgenus Euxoa (s. str.) (Fibiger 1997) where it was maintained in the last checklist of European Noctuoidea (Fibiger et al. 2011). Here we restore its placement in Pleonectopoda on the basis of the vesica's being twisted subbasally and wing pattern features enumerated in the description. The species is similar to the Nearctic westermanni species group (Lafontaine 1987). In the course of present study, we examined an extensive material on E. culminicola from European Alps. Genitalia slides GB, 0 440, 8449 males, 8448, 8449, 8450 females, coll. GB/ ZSM.</p><p>Distribution. Europe: Germany (South Bavaria); Austria (Vorarlberg, North- and East Tyrol, Alps, Salzburg); Andorra; South France (Mid Pyrenees, Provence, Alps de Haute Provence: Central Italy Apennines, Abruzzens); Switzerland (Graubünden, Wallis). The moths collected at the elevation over 2000 m.</p><p>Note. The records from Central Italy ( Montagna Grande, 1,800 m in ZSM) were most likely based on spuriously labeled material by F. Dannehl to increase the selling price (A. Zilli, pers. comm.) and require confirmation.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E6BA19FFEBFF9EA0A8FCDCA859F983	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Kononenko, V. S.;Behounek, G.;Gyulai, P.	Kononenko, V. S., Behounek, G., Gyulai, P. (2018): Descriptions of two new species of Euxoa Hübner, [1821], subgenus Pleonectopoda Grote, 1873, from Siberia (Lepidoptera, Noctuidae). Zootaxa 4483 (2): 258-270, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4483.2.2
03E6BA19FFEBFF9FA0A8F8FEA8CAFD9C.text	03E6BA19FFEBFF9FA0A8F8FEA8CAFD9C.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Pleonectopoda Grote 1873	<div><p>Subgenus Pleonectopoda Grote, 1873</p><p>Pleonectopoda Grote, 1873, Bulletin of the Buffalo Society of Natural Sciences 1: 136. Type-species: Pleonectopoda lewisi Grote, 1873 [USA]: Colorado.</p><p>E. (P.) steideli sp. n.</p><p>E. (P.) kodara sp. n.</p><p>E. (P.) hyperborea Lafontaine, 1987</p><p>E. (P.) churchillensis (McDunnough, 1932)</p><p>E. (P.) culminicola (Staudinger, 1870)</p><p>E. (P.) hilaris (Freyer, 1838)</p><p>E. (P.) derrae Hacker, 1985</p><p>E. (P.) lecerfi Zerny, 1934</p><p>E. (P.) haverkampfi (Standfuss, 1893)</p><p>E. (P.) continentalis Reisser, 1936</p><p>E. (P.) nevadensis Corti, 1928</p><p>E. (P.) rjabovi (Kozhanchikov, 1929)</p><p>E. (P.) inclusa Corti, 1931</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E6BA19FFEBFF9FA0A8F8FEA8CAFD9C	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Kononenko, V. S.;Behounek, G.;Gyulai, P.	Kononenko, V. S., Behounek, G., Gyulai, P. (2018): Descriptions of two new species of Euxoa Hübner, [1821], subgenus Pleonectopoda Grote, 1873, from Siberia (Lepidoptera, Noctuidae). Zootaxa 4483 (2): 258-270, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4483.2.2
