Megisba malaya

Malayan
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Family: Lycaenidae
Genus: Megisba
Species: M. malaya
Binomial name
Megisba malaya
(Horsfield, 1828)
Synonyms

Lycaena malaya Horsfield, 1828

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The Malayan (Megisba malaya) [1] is a small butterfly found in South Asia.[2] It belongs to the family of gossamer-winged butterflies (Lycaenidae).

It ranges from Sri Lanka, South India to Bengal, and from Kumaon to Assam in India onto Myanmar. The butterfly is also found in Andaman and Nicobars. It is usually not a rare species, but may be less common, even rare, in parts of its range.[3]

Description

This butterfly resembles the Quaker (Neopithecops zalmora), especially in flight. The female Malayan has a broader and more rounded forewing than the male.[2]

Wet-season form — Upperside: from dull somewhat pale brown to dark brown, some specimens nearly uniform, others with a more or less distinct pale discal patch on the fore wing. Hindwing: uniform; a slender short filamentous tail at apex of vein 1,very often absent. Underside: white. Forewing: with the following brown markings:—a spot in cell, a transverse short line on the discocellulars, a postdiscal curved series of transverse spots or very short bars that cross the wing from costa to dorsum and are in irregular echelon one with the other, followed by a slender transverse broken line, a subterminal series of broader transverse spots and an anticiliary slender line; at apex of wing the markings are diffuse and form a very small brown-shaded patch, while further inwards along the costa veins 10, 11 and 12 terminate in a minute brown dot. Hindwing : three spots near base in transverse order, a large, conspicuous, rounded, subcostal and a smaller similar spot near the middle of the dorsum, black; between the latter two and also along the discocellulars are some irregular much paler brown transverse spots on the disc, which are followed as on the fore wing by an outer postdiscal, very slender brown line, a subterminal series of brown or black spots, and a black anticiliary line. Cilia of fore and hind wings white, turning to dark brown at apex of fore wing. Antennae, head, thorax and abdomen dark brown, the antenna ringed narrowly with white; beneath: the palpi, thorax and abdomen snow-white, the third, slender acicular joint of the palpi conspicuously brown.[4]

Dry-season brood.— Very similar to the wet-season brood, but the forewing on the upperside bears a large, oval, obliquely-placed conical patch that extends from the middle of the dorsal margin to vein 4. In certain specimens this white bar or patch is continued on to the hind wing. Underside: similar to that of the wet-season form but all the markings broader, coarser, more prominent. Forewing: costa and apex in some specimens broadly shaded with diffuse fuscous brown; the outer postdiseal brown line formed into a series of lunules that extend outwards slenderly along the veins and join the anticiliary brown line, thus enclosing in the interspaces a series of spots of the white ground colour, each of which is centred with a black or dark brown subtriangular spot. Hindwing: the terminal markings modified as on the fore wing; the spot in interspace 3 of the subterminal series larger and more prominent than the others, the large subcostal black spot often broken by an anterior and a posterior silvery spot superposed on it. Antennae, head, thorax and abdomen as in specimens of the wet-season brood but slightly darker above.[4]

Subspecies include:[5]

The tailed and tailless subspecies are sympatric in Sikkim, the tailed one is more commonly found at lower altitudes.[6]

Ecology and life history

The Malayan is a butterfly of evergreen forests. Its caterpillar is light green, vermiform, the middle segments swollen; it feeds on Allophyllus cobbe (Sapindaceae).[2] The pupa is thick, with blunted ends.[6]

Adults fly low, close to the ground. This species is often seen in forest glades and forest edges. The males frequent cowdung and damp patches for mud-puddling, but at least on Borneo and probably elsewhere too not generally carrion or old fruit.[6][7]

Footnotes

  1. Beccaloni et al. (2003)
  2. 1 2 3 Wynter-Blyth (1957)
  3. Wynter-Blyth (1957), Haribal (1994)
  4. 1 2 Bingham (1907)
  5. Evans (1932)
  6. 1 2 3 Haribal (1992)
  7. Hamer et al. (2006)

References

External links

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