Junonia almana
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Peacock Pansy | ||||||||||||||||
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Scientific classification | ||||||||||||||||
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Binomial name | ||||||||||||||||
Junonia almana (Linnaeus, 1758) |
The Peacock Pansy Junonia almana is a species of nymphalid butterfly found in South Asia.
Contents |
[edit] Description
[edit] Dry-season form
Upperside rich orange-yellow. Fore wing with a pale dusky and a much darker short transverse bar with lateral jet-black marginal lines across cell, another somewhat similar bar defining the discocellulars ; costal margin, an inner and an outer subterminal line, and a terminal line dusky black; a large minutely white-centred ocellus with an inner slender and outer black ring on disc in interspace 2; two similar but smaller geminate subapical ocelli with an obscure pale spot above them and a short oblique bar connecting them to the black on the costa. Hind wing: a small minutely white-centred and very slenderly black-ringed discal ocellus in interspace 2, with a very much larger pale yellow and black-ringed ocellus above it spreading over interspaces 4, 5 and 6, the centre of this ocellus inwardly brownish orange, outwardly bluish black, with two minute white spots in vertical order between the two colours ; finally postdiscal subterminal and terminal black sinuous lines. [[Image:Peacock Pansy (Junonia almana)- Dry season on Mikania micrantha (Bittervine, Mile-a-minute, American rope, Chinese creeper) W IMG 3723.jpg|thumb| Dry season form on Mikania micrantha (Bittervine/ Mile-a-minute/ American rope/ Chinese creeper) in Kolkata, West Bengal, India. ]] Underside ochraceous brown, very variable. In most specimens the ceil of the fore wing is crossed by three dark sinuous bands, the outermost along the discocellulars ; these are very faint in some ; both fore and hind wings crossed by a basal and a discal pale sinuous line, the latter margined outwardly by a dark shade, which is traversed by an obscure somewhat obsolescent row of dark spots, and outwardly bounded by a subterminal sinuous line, the dark shade in many cases spreading on the fore wing to the terminal edge of the wing ; on the hind wing the subterminal line meets the discal in an acute angle at the tornus. Antennae dark brown; head, thorax and abdomen more or less orange-brown ; paler beneath.[1]
[edit] Wet-season form
Upperside similar, the black markings deeper in colour and heavier, the subterminal and terminal lines more clearly defined.
Underside pale ochraceous. Fore wing: cell crossed by live short sinuous dark brown lines, a similar lino on the discocellulars and another beyond it, both bent inwards at an angle and continued to the dorsum, the space between them forming a discal broad fascia, which pales to whitish posteriorly ; the postdiscal ocelli, subterminal and terminal lines as on the upperside but paler. Hind wing: a slender transverse subbasal dark line, a discal whitish straight fascia in continuation of the one on the fore wing; the postdiscal ocelli, the subterminal and terminal lines much as on the upperside but paler; the anterior ocellus with a double iris and centre. Antennae dark brown; head, thorax and abdomen slightly darker than in the dry-season form.[1]
[edit] More Images
Dry season form on Mikania micrantha (Bittervine, Mile-a-minute, American rope, Chinese creeper) in Kolkata, West Bengal, India. |
In Kolkata, West Bengal, India. |
In Kolkata, West Bengal, India. |
In Kolkata, West Bengal, India. |
In Kolkata, West Bengal, India. |
In Kolkata, West Bengal, India. |
In Kolkata, West Bengal, India. |
In Kolkata, West Bengal, India. |
A Peacock Pansy from Bogor, West Java |
UN (from Bogor, West Java) |
At Vikhroli, Mumbai |
[edit] Distribution
India and Southeast Asia into China, and Japan.[1]
[edit] Larva
"Cylindrical. Head blackish, slightly hairy. Body pale ochreous-brown, with a dorsal, subdorsal and lateral blackish line, and a row of small-ringed spots below the latter; second segment anteriorly with a transverse reddish stripe; second, third and fourth segments posteriorly with a transverse blackish stripe; second to last segment armed with a dorsal, subdorsal, and two lateral rows of short, fine-branched spines." (Frederic Moore quoted by C. T. Bingham)[1]
[edit] Pupa
"Rather short and thick ; head and thorax broad, headpiece pointed beneath ; thorax and abdomen dorsally with short tubercular points ; colour brownish-ochraceous." (Frederic Moore quoted by C. T. Bingham)[1]