Danaus chrysippus
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| Danaus chrysippus ( |
The Plain Tiger (Danaus chrysippus) or - outside Asia - African Monarch is a common butterfly
which is widespread in Asia and Africa. It belongs to the
danaine ("Crows and Tigers")
It is believed to be one of the first butterflies to be used in art. A 3500 year old Egyptian fresco in Luxor features the oldest illustration of this species (Larsen 1994).
The Plain Tiger can be considered the archetypical danaine of
Description
The Plain Tiger is a medium sized
Sexual Dimorphism
- The male Plain Tiger is smaller than the female, but more brightly colored
- In addition, male danaines have a number of secondary sexual characteristics. In the case of the Plain Tiger, these are:
- The male has a pouch on the hindwing. This spot is white with a thick black border and bulges slightly. It is a cluster of specialised scent scales used to attract females.
- The males possess two brush-like organs which can be pushed out of the tip of the abdomen.
Distribution
The range of the Plain Tiger extends from Africa and southern Europe, eastwards via
Sri Lanka, India, and
For subspecies, see below.
Ecology
It is found in every kind of country including the desert (pending availability of food) and right up into the mountains till 9000 feet. Primarily a butterfly of open country and gardens. Unlike the Common Tiger, a related species, is least common in damp, forested, hilly regions. It is a somewhat migratory species.
This butterfly is perhaps the commonest of Indian butterflies and is a familiar sight to practically everyone on the subcontinent. It flies from dawn to dusk, frequenting gardens, sipping from flowers and, late in the day, fluttering low over bushes to find a resting place for the night.
As usual for
Defense against predators, mimicry
The Plain Tiger is protected from attacks due to the unpalatable
The butterfly also has a tough,
The protection mechanisms of the Plain Tiger, as of the other danaines, and indeed of all colorful unpalatable butterflies, result in predators learning this memorable aspect at first hand. Predators soon associate the patterns and habits of such butterfly species with unpalatability to avoid hunting them in future.
This advantage of protection has led to a number of edible butterfly species, referred to as "mimics", evolving to resemble inedible butterflies, which are referred to as the "model". The resemblance is not only in color, shapes, and markings, but also in behavioural and flight patterns. This form of mimicry - where an edible species mimics an inedible species - is known as Batesian mimicry.
The mimics can resemble the models very closely. In some cases, it requires examination in hand and reference to field guides to tell them apart. The Plain Tiger is specifically mimicked by the following butterflies:
- Indian Fritillary (Argyreus hyperbius) females
Danaid Eggfly (Hypolimnas misippus forma inaria females.
The following butterflies have a general resemblance common to both the Plain Tiger and the Common Tiger:
Common Palmfly (Elymnias hypermnestra) females- Tamil Lacewing (Cethosia nietneri mahratta) males and females
Leopard Lacewing (Cethosia cyane) males and females
The similarity between the Plain and Common Tigers makes them Müllerian mimics, as the adverse experience a predator makes with either species will also protect the other.
Life cycle
The Plain Tiger breeds throughout the year in India, except in the
Egg
The female Plain Tiger perches on the upperside of a leaf and, curling its abdomen around the
edge, lays an egg on the underside. Only one egg is laid per leaf to avoid overcrowding of the caterpillars. The egg is silvery
white, shiny, tall, bullet-shaped with an apical point and ribbed sides.
Caterpillar
After the caterpillar hatches, its first meal is the eggshell itself. It lives its entire larval
life on the lower side of the leaves. During the first few days it has a very interesting manner of feeding: It will take up a
spot on the underside of the leaf and nip a complete circle around itself in the lower
As it grows, it eats both the lower and upper cuticle of the circle thus leaving smallish circular holes in the leaves of its host plant. When its mandibles are large enough it eats the complete leaf by gnawing at the edges.
The caterpillar is uniformly cylindrical. Its body is covered with bands of black and white interspersed with thick, yellow,
dorsolateral spots. The most striking characteristics are the 3 pairs of long and black tentacle-like appendages. The first pair is moveable and also the longest. The tentacles are present on the
3rd, 6th and 12th segments. The head is shiny, smooth and has alternating black and white semicircular bands. The legs and
prolegs are black and the
Larval food plants
The Plain Tiger's larval host plants are from the families
- Cryptolepis buchananii
Pupa
The pupa hangs freely from the support. It is widest at the 7th abdominal segment where it has a
double chain of extremely tiny golden and black beads. There are tiny golden spots on the shoulders and wing-cases. The rest of
the pupa is pale green with a smooth surface. The pupa is light pink when formed among dry or unnatural objects.
Systematics and taxonomy
Despite the external similarity, the Common Tiger is not closely related to this species (Smith et al. 2005). Following the review of Smith et al. (2005), three subspecies are nowadays recognized:
- Danaus chrysippus chrysippus
- Asia,
Mediterranean region, northern tropical Africa
- Danaus chrysippus alcippus - formerly D. c. aegyptius
- From the Cape Verde Islands through tropical Africa to Yemen and
Oman . Browner with broader white forewing spots.
- Danaus chrysippus orientis - formerly D. c. liboria
Saint Helena , southern tropical Africa to South Africa, Madagascar, Comoros,Seychelles and Mascarenes. Small white forewing spots.
D. c. alcippus is well on the way of becoming a distinct species (Smith et al. 2005).
On the other hand, the former subspecies petilia is nowadays recognized as a good species, the Lesser Wanderer. More enigmatic (see Smith et al. 2005) is the status of the former subspecies (or
However, it appears (from analysis of
The presumed subspecies cratippus most likely belongs to either the Lesser Wanderer or the Dorippus Tiger, but
confirmation of its
Several local
- Danaus chrysippus chrysippus f. alcippoides
- The upper hindwing is more or less very white; about half of the individuals have a second submarginal spot in the forewing. Occasionally found in Southeast Asia, very rarely in India.
- Danaus chrysippus chrysippus f. gelderi
- The upper hindwing has white markings. Occasionally found on
Sulawesi .
- Danaus chrysippus chrysippus f. bowringi
- The upper hindwing has a subapical band composed of somewhat larger spots, and an additional forewing spot as in f. alcippoides is always present. Found throughout the eastern parts of this subspecies' range.
On the other hand, the plethora of named taxa from Africa are apparently F1 or F2 hybrids between the Plain Tiger subspecies (the contact zone of which is in the general area of Uganda) and/or D. dorippus:
- Danaus chrysippus × alcippoides
- is D. c. chrysippus × D. c. alcippus
- Danaus × transiens, Danaus × klugii, Danaus × albinus and Danaus × semialbinus
- are D. c. alcippus × D. dorippus
References
- Evans, W. H. (1932): The Identification of Indian Butterflies (2nd edition). Bombay Natural History Society, Mumbai, India.
- Gaonkar, Harish (1996): Butterflies of the Western Ghats, India (including Sri Lanka) - A Biodiversity Assessment of a threatened mountain system. Centre for Ecological Sciences, IISc, Bangalore, India & Natural History Museum, London, UK.
- Gay, Thomas; Kehimkar, Isaac & Punetha, J. C.(1992): Common Butterflies of India. WWF-India and Oxford University Press, Mumbai, India.
- Jiggins, F. M.; Hurst, G. D. D.; Jiggins, C. D.; Schulenburg, J. H. G. v. D. & Majerus, M. E. N. (2000): The butterfly Danaus chrysippus is infected by a male-killing Spiroplasma bacterium. Parasitology 120(5): 439–446. doi:10.1017/S0031182099005867 (HTML abstract)
- Kunte, Krushnamegh (2005): India - A Lifescape: Butterflies of Peninsular India. Universities Press, Hyderabad, India. ISBN 81-7371-354-5
- Larsen, Torben (1994): Butterflies of Egypt.
Saudi Aramco World , issue 5 (September/October): 24-27.
- Smith, David A. S.; Lushai, Gugs & Allen, John A. (2005): A classification of Danaus butterflies (Lepidoptera: Nymphalidae) based upon data from morphology and DNA. Zool. J. Linn. Soc. 144(2): 191–212. doi:10.1111/j.1096-3642.2005.00169.x (HTML abstract)
- Wynter-Blyth, M. A. (1957): Butterflies of the Indian Region. Bombay Natural History Society, Mumbai, India.
See also
Mimic - Danainae
- Nymphalidae
- List of butterflies of India
- List of butterflies of India (Nymphalidae)
List of butterflies of India (Danainae)
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