Castalius ananda

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Dark Pierrot
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Superfamily: Papilionoidea
Family: Lycaenidae
Genus: Castalius
Species: C. ananda
Binomial name
Castalius ananda
De Nicéville 1884

The Dark Pierrot (Castalius ananda)[1][2] is a small butterfly found in India that belongs to the Lycaenids or Blues family.

Contents

[edit] Taxonomy

The butterfly was originally classified as Tarucus ananda (de Nicéville, [1884]).[3]It has been reclassified as Castalius ananda vide LepIndex of the Natural History Museum, London.[2] However, in Marrku Savela's site on biodiversity of Funet.fi, it has been classified as Tarucus ananda.[1]

[edit] Distribution

Peninsular and South India; Sikkim, Assam and Khasi Hills onto Myanmar and Dawnas; Orissa. In Southern India the butterfly occurs in Kanara, Nilgiris and Anaimalai Hills. Possibly Thailand.[3][4]

[edit] Status

Not Rare.[3]

[edit] Description

For a key to the terms used see Lepidopteran glossary

[edit] Male

Upperside: dark purple, sometimes fuliginous, sometimes bright and shining. Fore and hind wings: terminal margins edged with fuscous brownish-black and an anticiliary jet-black line; cilia brown ; tail black tipped with white. Underside: more or less dingy white. Fore wing: a broad oblique brownish-black band from base to just before the middle of the eosta; from the latter a dark brownish-black bar proceeds vertically down to middle of interspace 3, on the inner side of this and touching it in the middle is a large brownish-black irregular spot that extends posteriorly to vein 1 ; beyond this a broad discal trausverse brownish-black band twice interrupted, the posterior portion slightly narrowed below is shifted obliquely inwards and ends on vein 1 ; this is followed by a postdiscal transverse series of brownish-black spots that anteriorly nearly coalesces with the discal band, a transverse subterminal line of similar but smaller spots and a well-marked anticiliary black line. Hind wing: a basal short, brownish-black, anteriorly attenuate bar placed obliquely, a transverse subbasal band of four large coalescent black spots, a transverse curved discal band twice broken as on the fore wing and similar postdiscal subterminal and terminal markings. Antennae black, shafts ringed with white, head, thorax and abdomen dark brownish-black; beneath : the palpi black, thorax and abdomen down the middle white.[4]

[edit] Female

Upperside : fuscous black. Fore and hind wings: in most specimens the markings of the underside show (sometimes very conspicuously) through. Underside: as in the male. Antenna, head, thorax and abdomen similar to those of the male.[4]

[edit] Larva

"Like that of Castalius ananda feeds only on the parenchyma of the leaf .... It is of the usual woodlouse form, slightly flattened head concealed in the second segment; surface more or less rough; a fringe of long white bristles all round with an erected ridge of similar bristles along the back from the second segment; those on the 3rd and 7th segments and the last two much longer than the others; those on the 2nd segment very few, short and black. It has a conspicuous gland on the 12th segment, and is attended by small species of ants of the genus Crematogaster. Its colour is pale green, the dorsal portion of the 2nd, 4th, 5th, 6th and last two segments being dark brown, while the centre segments are almost yellow with a darker dorsal line. We found it feeding on Zizyphus xylopyrus and also on Loranthus, where it was attended by Crematogaster ants."[4]

[edit] Pupa

"Of the usual Castalius form but narrow and slightly flattened. It is intensely glossy as if covered with gum. It varies in colour, being sometimes black, at others green with inconstant black markings." (Davidson, Bell & Aitken)[4]

[edit] Foodplants

Larva feed on Loranthus and Zizyphus.[1]

[edit] Ant association

Castalius ananda is associated with Crematogaster.[1]

[edit] Cited references

  1. ^ a b c d Marrku Savela's Website on Lepidoptera on Caleta genus.
  2. ^ a b Card for Castalius ananda in LepIndex. Accessed 28 Jun 2007.
  3. ^ a b c Evans,W.H.(1932) The Identification of Indian Butterflies, ser no H12.1, pp 215
  4. ^ a b c d e Bingham, C. T. 1907. Fauna of British India. Butterflies. Volume 2

[edit] See also