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The Henderson
The Henderson
The Henderson
50 m
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Catch butterflies to add to the collection
捕捉蝴蝶加入收藏中
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Acraea issoria
苧麻珍蝶
苎麻珍蝶
Acraelinae
珍蝶族
珍蝶族
Acraea issoria, the yellow coster, is a small, leathery-winged butterfly. This species of the subgenus and the tawny coster acraea terpsicore with its sister species moluccana and meyeri of the nominotypical subgenus,
are the only Asiatic representatives of the predominantly African subfamily Acraeinae.
Male
Upperside yellow.
Fore wing: veins along the costal margin broadly and apical half of those along the terminal margin narrowly black; a broad curved mark along the discocellulars, the apex and terminal margin more or less broadly also black, the last traversed by a series of spots of the ground-colour.
Hind wing: apical half of the veins from 1 a to 8, subterminal zigzag and terminal slender lines, black, the subterminal line coalescing with the terminal along the veins.
Underside
Fore wing: ground-colour yellow, getting paler towards apex, the veins conspicuously darker, the black discocellular mark showing through by transparency.
Hind wing: ground-colour a delicate pinkish white, the veins conspicuously black; a broad subterminal ochraceous lunular band margined on both inner and outer sides by black lines, and a terminal, slender black line continued along the dorsum.
Antennae, head, thorax and abdomen black, the thorax with a little ochraceous yellow pubescence anteriorly; thorax and abdomen beneath black sparingly marked and spotted with very pale ochraceous.
Female.
Upperside: ground-colour a paler duller ochraceous yellow than in the male, with similar but broader black markings.
Underside: ground-colour duller than in the male, the black markings showing through by transparency.
Faunis eumeus, the large faun is a butterfly found in South and South East Asia that belongs to the Morphinae subfamily of the brush-footed butterfly family.
Upperside of males and females: forewing maroon, with a very broad, oblique, preapical, somewhat diffuse, bright ochraceous band extending from costa to termen and along latter almost to the tornus;
this band broader in the female than in the male. Hindwing brown, shading to dark maroon anteriorly. Underside maroon brown;
apex of forewing broadly paler, dorsal margin of same dull brown; subbasal, discal and postdiscal dark, sinuous, continuous lines crossing both wings;
between the latter two a series of prominent round white spots, five or six on the forewing (straight in the male, slightly incurved in the female), six or seven on the hindwing, arched in both sexes.
Antennae, head, thorax and abdomen brown.
Danaus genutia, the common tiger is one of the common butterflies of India.
It belongs to the "crows and tigers", that is, the Danainae group of the brush-footed butterflies family.
The butterfly is also called striped tiger in India to differentiate it from the equally common plain tiger, Danaus chrysippus.
The species was first described by Pieter Cramer in 1779.
The butterfly closely resembles the monarch butterfly of the Americas. The wingspan is 70 to 95 millimetres. Both sexes of the butterfly have tawny wings with veins marked with broad black bands.
The male has a pouch on the hindwing. The margins of the wings are black with two rows of white spots. The underside of the wings resembles the upperside but is paler in colouration.
The male common tiger has a prominent black-and-white spot on the underside of the hindwing.
In drier regions the tawny part of the hindwing pales and approaches white in colour making it very similar to the white tiger.
Caprona alida, the yellow spotted angle or Alida angle, is a butterfly belonging to the family Hesperiidae.
It is found in India, Sri Lanka, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam, Laos, Hainan and southern China.
Male. Upperside ochreous-brown. Forewing with five sub-apical white spots, the three from near the costa in an outwardly oblique straight line, the two lower ones minute, sometimes absent;
a small round dot within the cell before its middle, a spot within the outer end, highly excavated on its outer side, its upper half merely a short curved streak,
a round spot in the middle of the first median interspace, a round dot outside towards the base of the second median interspace, a minute dot immediately below the lower spot and a small round spot inwardly below it,
both in the interno-median interspace, a very minute dot close to the costa at its middle, all the spots and dots white and semi-hyaline;
an indistinct brown narrow bar before the middle across the interno-median interspace; and an indistinct, irregular, recurved brown lunular discal line.
Hindwing with indistinct, lunular, brown, discal and sub-marginal lines; both wings with brown outer marginal line and white cilia, with small brown patches at the vein ends.
Underside pale brown, spots and markings as above, both wings covered and smeared with white scaling, the outer marginal line brown, with a little brown suffusion on its inner side.
Antennae with the underside of the upper half of the club ochreous, a white streak on the lower half, the shaft with white dots.
Palpi, body beneath and the legs white; head and body above concolorous with the wings, a white spot on each side of the head.
Female. Similar to the male, duller in colour above and not nearly so white beneath, and across the disc of the forewing beneath there is a rather broad, indistinct brownish fascia.
Spindasia syama, the club silverline, is a butterfly of the family Lycaenidae. It is found in South-East Asia. The wingspan is 27–32 mm. The larvae feed on Psidium guajava and Dioscorea batatus.
Phalanta phalantha, the common leopard or spotted rustic, is a sun-loving butterfly of the nymphalid or brush-footed butterfly family.
The common leopard is a medium-sized butterfly with a wingspan of 50–55 mm with a tawny colour and marked with black spots.
The underside of the butterfly is more glossy than the upper and both the male and female are similar looking.
A more prominent purple gloss on the underside is found in the dry-season form of this butterfly.
Male and female. Upperside bright yellowish-ochreous.
Forewing with two black short slender sinuous bars across middle of the cell, a similar darker pair at its end, followed beyond by a short broad sinuous streak from the costa to the lower radial,
and is then succeeded below the cell by an inwardly-oblique series of four irregular-shaped spots, and beyond by a medial-discal transverse row of similarly disposed narrow spots,
an outer-discal row of round spots, then an inner submarginal sinuous line, confluent with an outer straight line, and a marginal row of triangular spots.
Hindwing with a slightly-defined slender black lunule within the cell, two before its end, and two also above it;
a transverse inner-discal irregular series of slender lunules which are slightly pale bordered externally;
a medial-discal row of four larger black oval spots, two submarginal sinuous slightly confluent lines, and marginal triangular spots.
Underside paler, and with all the markings, as on upperside much less defined;
the interspaces of cell-bars and outer markings suffused with violet-grey, and the inner-discal series outwardly bordered with greyish lunules.
In some specimens, presumably dry-season, all the markings on the upper and underside are less prominent.
Body and palpi above yellowish-ochreous; beneath and also femora beneath greyish-white; tibia and tarsi pale ochreous; antennae ochreous-brown.
Papilio xuthus, the Asian swallowtail, Chinese yellow swallowtail, or Xuthus swallowtail,
is a yellow-coloured, medium to large sized swallowtail butterfly found in northeast Asia, northern Myanmar, southern China, Taiwan, the Korean Peninsula, Japan (from Hokkaidō to the Yaeyama Islands),
Siberia and the Hawaiian Islands. It was also recorded in the state of Arunachal Pradesh, India, in 2014.
The Asian swallowtail is a mid-sized, yellow, prominently-tailed butterfly. It has a wingspan of 90 to 110 mm. Its normal colour pattern consists of a black pattern on a yellow background.
Wing coloration is sexually dimorphic, with females showing broader proximal marginal bands in the hindwing. Blue-iridescent and orange scales separate the black bands on the hindwing.
The black bands also run in stripes of varying thickness along the forewing. The young caterpillar mimics bird feces and has a white and brown spot on its head.
As they mature, caterpillars develop a light green body colour with brown spots.
Prioneris thestylis, the spotted sawtooth, is a small butterfly of the family Pieridae, that is, the yellows and whites, which is found in India and Southeast Asia.
Zemeros flegyas, the Punchinello, is a small butterfly found in South Asia and Southeast Asia that belongs to the family Riodinidae.
In wet-season form, Male upperside is vinaceous (colour of red wine) brown, the veins ochraceous brown.
Forewings and hindwings crossed by four series of minute white spots, the postdiscal series very often obscure, each spot bordered inwardly by a more or less elongate black spot;
a terminal very slender black line; cilia alternately black and white.
Underside is bright ochraceous brown, the veins conspicuously paler, the white black-bordered spots as on the upperside but larger, more clearly defined and prominent.
Antennae brown ringed with white; club black, ochraceous at apex; head, thorax and abdomen concolorous with the wings; beneath, the palpi, thorax and abdomen slightly paler than the wings.
In dry-season form, Male upperside has the ground colour darker than in the wet-season form; the spots are smaller and duller in colour.
On the forewing the postdiscal series of spots often obsolescent except the spots in interspaces 3, 6 and 8, the latter two very large and prominent;
sub-terminal series of spots also often obsolescent. The veins on both forewings and hindwings not paler than the ground colour.
Underside is similar to the underside in the wet-season form, but the ground colour a shade darker; the veins not conspicuously paler;
the white spots as in the wet-season form, except the postdiscal and subterminal series on the forewing, which are as on the upperside, the anterior large white spots of the postdiscal series being very prominent;
the inner black bordering to the white spots much smaller than in the wet-season form. Antennae, head, thorax and abdomen as in the wet-season form.
Females have the upper and undersides similar to those of the wet-season form, but the ground colour brighter and paler; markings also similar, but the black bordering to the white spots less prominent.
Lethe rohria, the common treebrown, is a species of satyrine butterfly found in Asia.
Males and females: Upperside van Dyke brown, slightly darker, especially in the female, towards apex of forewing.
Male. Forewing: a costal and two preapical spots white.
Hindwing: the ocelli (eyespots) of the underside showing through, sometimes forming two or three obscure black spots; two slender subterminal black lines. Underside paler, shaded with dark brown.
Forewing: narrow subbasal and outer cellular transverse sinuous white lines;
an irregular broad discal and a narrower postdiscal band white, forming a V, the latter bearing a series of four blind, dusky-black, fulvous-ringed ocelli; the two preapical white spots as on the upperside.
Distinct slender subterminal whitish and broader terminal ochraceous lines. Hindwing: a subbasal transverse sinuous white line;
a postdiscal arched series of six black ocelli, their centres disintegrated, their inner ring ochraceous, outer brown, and the whole series bordered inwardly and outwardly by lilacine (lilac-coloured) white lines;
finally a slender white subterminal and a broader ochraceous terminal line as on the forewing.
Female upperside differs in having a broad, oblique, white, discal band on the forewing and a spot below its posterior end in interspace 1, the inner border of the band bi-emarginate, the outer irregularly sinuous.
Underside as in the male, but the markings more pronounced, the white discal band on forewing very prominent. Antennae, head, thorax and abdomen brown; antennae preapically black, at apex ochraceous.
Cepora nadina, the lesser gull,is a small to medium-sized butterfly of the family Pieridae, that is, the yellows and whites.
The species was first described by Hippolyte Lucas in 1852. It is native to Sri Lanka, India, Myanmar, Hainan, and southeast Asia.
Ancema blanka, the silver royal,is a species of lycaenid or blue butterfly found in the Indomalayan realm.
The species was first described by Lionel de Nicéville in 1894. They fly very fast.
During summers, the male occasionally comes to water but usually keeps to the treetops and rocks, especially on the summit of hills, where they basks in the sun with the wings half open.
Silver royals can sometimes be seen sitting on the dung of animals and by the sides of small streams and waterfalls. Females are rarely seen.
Zeltus is a butterfly genus in the family Lycaenidae, the blues. It is monotypic containing the species Zeltus amasa, the fluffy tit, a small butterfly found in Indomalayan realm.
The butterfly is found in India, specially the Western Ghats, Sikkim to Assam. It can also be found in Myanmar, Thailand, West Malaysia, Sumatra, Borneo, Java and the Philippines.
Zeltus amasa has false eyes, legs, and antennae on the hindwing, which resembles and diverts attention from its real head. If it is attacked, its starts flying in an unexpected direction.
The genus is mostly found at hot, wet forest areas. It flies feebly. The male Zeltus rarely visits flowers, and stays on wet or damp patches, or on the leaves which are about 10 feet (3.0 m) above the ground.
The female mostly stays inside deep forest and is rarely seen.
The common Mormon prefers lightly wooded country, but is present everywhere and high up into the hills. It is a regular visitor to gardens, being especially abundant in orchards of its food plants—oranges and limes.
It is most common in the monsoon and post-monsoon months. This butterfly is known for the mimicry displayed by the numerous forms of its females which mimic inedible red-bodied swallowtails,
such as the common rose and the crimson rose.