Cymothoe (butterfly)

Cymothoe
Cymothoe sangaris
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Family: Nymphalidae
Subfamily: Limenitidinae
Genus: Cymothoe
Hübner, [1819]
Synonyms
  • Pallene Doubleday, [1848]
  • Eupithes Westwood, [1850]
  • Paradiadema Distant, [1880]

Cymothoe is a genus of butterflies in the subfamily Limenitidinae, the admirals and relatives. They are known commonly as gliders.[1] The genus is distributed in the Afrotropical ecozone, where species are found mainly in forest habitat.[1] mainly in the Guinean Forests of West Africa and the Congolian forests.

Description

Medium-large to large-size (wingspan 40-70 millimeters) often quite colourful butterflies.Species in this genus exhibit a number of different colours and patterns. Among the most remarkable are a number of species where the upper side is solid coloured bright red or orange. Another group is largely pale yellow; others deep ochreous yellow and chocolate brown or pure white.

Biology

The larvae feed on various shrubs and trees. Recorded host genera include Rawsonia and Kiggelaria (Achariaceae), Fernandoa and Kigelia (Bignoniaceae), Vismia (Hypericaceae), Dovyalis (Salicaceae) and Rinorea (Violaceae). The adults spend most tome in the canopy but also seek out sunlit spots between the trees and feed on forest floor decaying vegetation.

Taxonomy

These butterflies exhibit sexual dimorphism. Individuals can also be variable within a species, especially females. The females of C. caenis, for example, are so variable that authorities have described 20 different forms of the species based on their differences.[1]

The sister genus is Harma. The type species of the genus is Papilio althea Cramer.

Species groups

Defining species groups is a convenient way of subdividing well-defined genera with a large number of recognized species. Cymothoe species are so arranged in assemblages called "species groups" but (not superspecies, but an informal phenetic arrangement). These may or may not be clades. As molecular phylogenetic studies continue, lineages distinct enough to warrant some formal degree of recognition become evident and new groupings are suggested, but consistent ranking remains a problem.

Species

There are about 75 known species.[1]

Listed alphabetically within species groups:[2]

References

External links

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