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{{Short description|Species of butterfly}}
{{Italic title}}
{{Speciesbox
{{Taxobox
| name = Ciliate blue
| name = Ciliate blue
| image = Ciliate Blue Anthene emolus (male) (5463676480).jpg
| image = Ciliate Blue Anthene emolus (male) (5463676480).jpg
| image_caption = upper side
| image_caption = Upperside
| image2 = Ciliate Blue Anthene emolus (5463677902).jpg
| image2 = Ciliate Blue Anthene emolus (5463677902).jpg
| image2_caption = ventral view
| image2_caption = Ventral view
| taxon = Anthene emolus
| regnum = [[Animal]]ia
| authority = ([[Jean-Baptiste Godart|Godart]] 1823)
| phylum = [[Arthropod]]a
| classis = [[Insect]]a
| synonyms =
| ordo = [[Lepidoptera]]
| familia = [[Lycaenidae]]
| genus = ''[[Anthene]]''
| species = '''''A. emolus'''''
| binomial = ''Anthene emolus''
| binomial_authority = ([[Jean Baptiste Godart|Godart]] 1823)
| synonyms =
*''Polyommatus emolus'' <small>Godart, [1824]</small>
*''Polyommatus emolus'' <small>Godart, [1824]</small>
*''Lycaenesthes emolus ''
*''Lycaenesthes emolus ''
Line 27: Line 20:
*''Lycaenesthes emolus minor'' <small>van Eecke, 1918</small>
*''Lycaenesthes emolus minor'' <small>van Eecke, 1918</small>
}}
}}
'''''Anthene emolus''''', the '''ciliate blue''', is a small [[butterfly]] found in [[India]]<ref name=Smetacek>{{Cite book|url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/287980260|title=A Synoptic Catalogue of the Butterflies of India|last1=R. K.|first1=Varshney|last2=Smetacek|first2=Peter|publisher=Butterfly Research Centre, Bhimtal & Indinov Publishing |year=2015|isbn=978-81-929826-4-9|location=New Delhi|pages=126|doi=10.13140/RG.2.1.3966.2164}}</ref> and [[southeast Asia]]<ref name=funet>{{cite web |editor-last=Savela |editor-first=Markku |date=November 5, 2018 |url=https://www.nic.funet.fi/pub/sci/bio/life/insecta/lepidoptera/ditrysia/papilionoidea/lycaenidae/polyommatinae/anthene/#emolus |title=''Anthene emolus'' (Godart, [1824]) |website=Lepidoptera and Some Other Life Forms |access-date=October 14, 2020}}</ref> that belongs to the [[Lycaenidae|lycaenids or blues]] family. The species was [[Species description|first described]] by [[Jean-Baptiste Godart]] in 1823.

'''''Anthene emolus''''', the '''ciliate blue''', is a small [[butterfly]] found in [[India]]<ref name=Smetacek>{{Cite book|url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/287980260_A_Synoptic_Catalogue_of_the_Butterflies_of_India|title=A Synoptic Catalogue of the Butterflies of India|last=R.K.|first=Varshney|last2=Smetacek|first2=Peter|publisher=Butterfly Research Centre, Bhimtal & Indinov Publishing, New Delhi|year=2015|isbn=978-81-929826-4-9|location=New Delhi|pages=126|doi=10.13140/RG.2.1.3966.2164}}</ref> and [[southeast Asia]]<ref name=funet>{{Cite web|url=http://ftp.funet.fi/pub/sci/bio/life/insecta/lepidoptera/ditrysia/papilionoidea/lycaenidae/polyommatinae/anthene/|title=''Anthene'' Doubleday, 1847 Ciliate Blues Hairtails|last=Savela|first=Markku|date=|website=Lepidoptera Perhoset Butterflies and Moths|archive-url=|archive-date=|dead-url=|access-date=}}</ref> that belongs to the [[Lycaenidae|lycaenids or blues]] family.


==Description==
==Description==

===Male===
===Male===
Upperside: dull purple; bases of the wings suffused with blue; both forewings and hindwings with well-marked jet-black anticiliary lines, that on the forewing expand slightly at the apex. Hindwing: the costal margin above vein 7 and the dorsal margin below vein 1a fuscous brown; irregular, transverse, sub-terminal black spots in interspaces 1 to 3, those in interspaces 1 and 2 much larger than that in interspace 3; posterior basal area covered with long purplish-brown hairs. Cilia of both forewings and hindwings brown.<ref name="Bingham"/>
Upperside: dull purple; bases of the wings suffused with blue; both forewings and hindwings with well-marked jet-black anteciliary lines, that on the forewing expand slightly at the apex. Hindwing: the costal margin above vein 7 and the dorsal margin below vein 1a fuscous brown; irregular, transverse, sub-terminal black spots in interspaces 1 to 3, those in interspaces 1 and 2 much larger than that in interspace 3; posterior basal area covered with long purplish-brown hairs. Cilia of both forewings and hindwings brown.<ref name="Bingham"/>


Underside: purplish brown with a smooth satiny lustre. Forewing: a short band on the discocellulars, a transverse comparatively broad discal band with very sinuate margins, and a subterminal, continuous, lunular, much narrower band; the former two brown, of a shade darker than the ground colour, the subterminal band fuscous black; the band on the discocellulars and the discal band edged narrowly with white both on the inner and outer sides, the subterminal band very obscurely similarly edged on the outer side only. Hindwing: somewhat densely irrorated with black scales at extreme base and crossed transversely by seven or eight very irregular lines of slender white lunules; the outer two lines outwardly concave, the others outwardly convex, each lunule of the inner line of the former two series touching the corresponding lunule of the line next to it on the inner side, so that in each interspace the two touching lines of lunules seem to form a series of markings like X; finally, a white-edged black spot in the middle of the dorsum and another subterminal black spot crowned inwardly with orange in interspace 3. Both forewings and hindwings with slender jet-black anticiliary lines and brown cilia, the anticiliary line on the hindwing edged inwardly and outwardly by a white thread.<ref name="Bingham"/>
Underside: purplish brown with a smooth satiny lustre. Forewing: a short band on the discocellulars, a transverse comparatively broad discal band with very sinuate margins, and a subterminal, continuous, lunular, much narrower band; the former two brown, of a shade darker than the ground colour, the subterminal band fuscous black; the band on the discocellulars and the discal band edged narrowly with white both on the inner and outer sides, the subterminal band very obscurely similarly edged on the outer side only. Hindwing: somewhat densely sprinkled with black scales at extreme base and crossed transversely by seven or eight very irregular lines of slender white lunules; the outer two lines outwardly concave, the others outwardly convex, each lunule of the inner line of the former two series touching the corresponding lunule of the line next to it on the inner side, so that in each interspace the two touching lines of lunules seem to form a series of markings like X; finally, a white-edged black spot in the middle of the dorsum and another subterminal black spot crowned inwardly with orange in interspace 3. Both forewings and hindwings with slender jet-black anteciliary lines and brown cilia, the anteciliary line on the hindwing edged inwardly and outwardly by a white thread.<ref name="Bingham"/>


Antennae black, the shafts speckled with white; head,thorax and abdomen purplish brown.<ref name="Bingham"/>
Antennae black, the shafts speckled with white; head, thorax and abdomen purplish brown.<ref name="Bingham"/>


===Female===
===Female===
Upperside: brown, the bases of the wings glossed with pale violet-blue on the forewing, in some specimens extended for two-thirds the length of the wing but always more or less of a broad margin of the ground colour is left along the costa, a still broader margin along the term en and a narrow edging along the dorsum; on the hindwing the blue gloss rarely extends further than the basal third. Both forewings and hindwings with slender anticiliary black lines, that on the hindwing posteriorly is inwardly margined with a thread of white, on the inner side of which again and touching it are three or four conical or triangular small black spots in the interspaces. Cilia of both wings pale brown.<ref name="Bingham"/>
Upperside: brown, the bases of the wings glossed with pale violet-blue on the forewing, in some specimens extended for two-thirds the length of the wing but always more or less of a broad margin of the ground colour is left along the costa, a still broader margin along the term en and a narrow edging along the dorsum; on the hindwing the blue gloss rarely extends further than the basal third. Both forewings and hindwings with slender anteciliary black lines, that on the hindwing posteriorly is inwardly margined with a thread of white, on the inner side of which again and touching it are three or four conical or triangular small black spots in the interspaces. Cilia of both wings pale brown.<ref name="Bingham"/>


Underside: ground colour slightly paler, markings similar.<ref name="Bingham"/>
Underside: ground colour slightly paler, markings similar.<ref name="Bingham"/>


Antennae blackish brown, the shafts speckled with white as in the male; head, thorax and abdomen brown; beneath: the palpi, thorax and abdomen paler brown.<ref name="Bingham">{{citation-attribution|{{cite book |last1=Bingham |first1=C.T. |authorlink=Charles Thomas Bingham |title=The Fauna of British India, Including Ceylon and Burma |url=https://archive.org/stream/butterflies02bingiala#page/372/mode/2up/ |volume=II |edition=1st |publisher= [[Taylor & Francis|Taylor and Francis, Ltd.]] |location=London |year=1907|pages=373-375}}|}}</ref><ref name=SwinhoeIndica>{{citation-attribution|{{Cite book|url=https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/104151#page/69/mode/1up|title=Lepidoptera Indica. Vol. VIII |last=Swinhoe|first=Charles|authorlink=Charles Swinhoe|publisher=Lovell Reeve and Co.|year=1910-1911|isbn=|location=London|pages=55-57}}|}}</ref>
Antennae blackish brown, the shafts speckled with white as in the male; head, thorax and abdomen brown; beneath: the palpi, thorax and abdomen paler brown.<ref name="Bingham">{{Source-attribution|sentence=yes|{{cite book |last1=Bingham |first1=C. T. |author-link=Charles Thomas Bingham |title=The Fauna of British India, Including Ceylon and Burma: Butterflies Volume II |url=https://archive.org/stream/butterflies02bingiala#page/372/mode/2up/ |publisher=[[Taylor & Francis|Taylor and Francis, Ltd.]] |location=London |year=1907|pages=373–375}}}}</ref><ref name=SwinhoeIndica>{{Source-attribution|sentence=yes|{{Cite book|url=https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/104151#page/69/mode/1up|title=Lepidoptera Indica: Volume VIII |last=Swinhoe|first=Charles|author-link=Charles Swinhoe|publisher=Lovell Reeve and Co.|year=1910–1911|location=London|pages=55–57}}}}</ref>


==Larva==
==Larva==
<blockquote>
<blockquote>
When full-fed 0.62 of an inch in length, somewhat dark green in colour (of a darker shade than most Lycaenid larvae), smooth and shining, the whole surface covered with minute pits to be seen only under a strong magnifying-glass. The head is very small and retractile as usual and of a pale green colour; the second segment is unmarked, the third to sixth segments inclusive have some obscure reddish-brown dorsal blotches, the three following segments are unmarked, the tenth to twelfth segments have somewhat similar blotches to those on the third to the sixth segments, but they are more distinct and darker in shade. There is a pale yellow lateral line just above the legs. All the segments are irregularly and broadly pitted at the sides; these pits seem to assume more or less the form of a longitudinal subdorsal depression, below which to the lateral line the colour of the insect is slightly paler. The whole larva is much depressed, somewhat wider than high and seems to gradually increase in breadth to the tenth segment, the last segment is almost as broad and rounded. The larva varies greatly in colour and markings, some being pale green throughout and unmarked, others again are reddish brown throughout. It feeds in Calcutta on ''[[Nephelium litchi]]'', ''[[Cassia fistula]]'', and ''[[Heynea trijuga]]'', and not improbably, as it feeds on so many bushes, it will eat others. Dr. Forel identifies the ant which attends the larva as ''[[Oecophylla smaragdina]]'', Fabr., the large red and green ant which makes immense nests of growing leaves in trees. ([[Lionel de Niceville]] quoted by Bingham)<ref name="Bingham"/>
When full-fed 0.62 of an inch in length, somewhat dark green in colour (of a darker shade than most Lycaenid larvae), smooth and shining, the whole surface covered with minute pits to be seen only under a strong magnifying-glass. The head is very small and retractile as usual and of a pale green colour; the second segment is unmarked, the third to sixth segments inclusive have some obscure reddish-brown dorsal blotches, the three following segments are unmarked, the tenth to twelfth segments have somewhat similar blotches to those on the third to the sixth segments, but they are more distinct and darker in shade. There is a pale yellow lateral line just above the legs. All the segments are irregularly and broadly pitted at the sides; these pits seem to assume more or less the form of a longitudinal subdorsal depression, below which to the lateral line the colour of the insect is slightly paler. The whole larva is much depressed, somewhat wider than high and seems to gradually increase in breadth to the tenth segment, the last segment is almost as broad and rounded. The larva varies greatly in colour and markings, some being pale green throughout and unmarked, others again are reddish brown throughout. It feeds in Calcutta on ''[[Nephelium litchi]]'', ''[[Cassia fistula]]'', and ''[[Heynea trijuga]]'', and not improbably, as it feeds on so many bushes, it will eat others. Dr. Forel identifies the ant which attends the larva as ''[[Oecophylla smaragdina]]'', Fabr., the large red and green ant which makes immense nests of growing leaves in trees. ([[Lionel de Nicéville]] quoted by Bingham)<ref name="Bingham"/>
</blockquote>
</blockquote>


==Pupa==
==Pupa==
<blockquote>
<blockquote>
0.4 of an inch in length, of the usual Lyccenid shape, the tail pointed, the thorax slightly humped and ending in a somewhat sharp ridge line on the back; it is coloured pale ochraceous and bears a prominent diamond-shaped mark posteriorly, It is smooth throughout, reddish brown sprinkled with minute darker dots. (de Niceville)<ref name="Bingham"/>
0.4 of an inch in length, of the usual Lyccenid shape, the tail pointed, the thorax slightly humped and ending in a somewhat sharp ridge line on the back; it is coloured pale ochraceous and bears a prominent diamond-shaped mark posteriorly, It is smooth throughout, reddish brown sprinkled with minute darker dots. (de Nicéville)<ref name="Bingham"/>
</blockquote>
</blockquote>


Line 59: Line 50:
Listed alphabetically:<ref name=funet/>
Listed alphabetically:<ref name=funet/>
*''Anthene emolus andamanicus'' <small>(Fruhstorfer, 1916)</small> – (Andamans)
*''Anthene emolus andamanicus'' <small>(Fruhstorfer, 1916)</small> – (Andamans)
*''Anthene emolus emolus'' – (north-western Himalayas to Burma, Thailand, Laos, Vietnam, Hainan, southern Yunnan)
*''Anthene emolus emolus'' – (north-western Himalayas to Myanmar, Thailand, Laos, Vietnam, Hainan, southern Yunnan)
*''Anthene emolus goberus'' <small>(Fruhstorfer, 1916)</small> – (Thailand, Peninsular Malaya, Singapore, Sumatra, Borneo, Hainan)
*''Anthene emolus goberus'' <small>(Fruhstorfer, 1916)</small> – (Thailand, Peninsular Malaya, Singapore, Sumatra, Borneo, Hainan)
*''Anthene emolus javanus'' <small>(Fruhstorfer, 1916)</small> – (Java, Sumbawa)
*''Anthene emolus javanus'' <small>(Fruhstorfer, 1916)</small> – (Java, Sumbawa)
Line 73: Line 64:


==External links==
==External links==
*{{cite web |last1=Takanami |first1=Yusuke |last2=Seki |first2=Yasuo |name-list-style=amp |date=2001 |url=http://www.asahi-net.or.jp/~EY4Y-TKNM/Polyomatinae-Phil/Anthene.html |title=Genus ''Anthene'' |website=A Synonymic List of Lycaenidae from the Philippines |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20010630115931/http://www.asahi-net.or.jp/~EY4Y-TKNM/Polyomatinae-Phil/Anthene.html |archive-date=June 30, 2001 |via=Internet Archive}} With images.
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20120930180830/http://www.asahi-net.or.jp/~EY4Y-TKNM/philframe.html Asahi] Correctly determined photos of ''Anthene emolus''


{{Taxonbar|from=Q4771644}}
{{Taxonbar |from=Q4771644}}


[[Category:Anthene]]
[[Category:Anthene]]
[[Category:Butterflies of India]]
[[Category:Butterflies of Asia]]
[[Category:Butterflies described in 1823]]
[[Category:Butterflies described in 1823]]
[[Category:Butterflies of Singapore]]
[[Category:Butterflies of Singapore]]

Latest revision as of 07:11, 13 October 2021

Ciliate blue
Upperside
Ventral view
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Family: Lycaenidae
Genus: Anthene
Species:
A. emolus
Binomial name
Anthene emolus
(Godart 1823)
Synonyms
  • Polyommatus emolus Godart, [1824]
  • Lycaenesthes emolus
  • Lampides balliston Hübner, [1823]
  • Lycaenesthes bengalensis Moore, [1866]
  • Pseudodipsas modesta Staudinger, 1889
  • Lycaenesthes emolus andamanicus Fruhstorfer, 1916
  • Lycaenesthes emolus goberus Fruhstorfer, 1916
  • Nacaduba klanga Corbet, 1938
  • Lycaenesthes emolus javanus Fruhstorfer, 1916
  • Lycaenesthes emolus minor van Eecke, 1918

Anthene emolus, the ciliate blue, is a small butterfly found in India[1] and southeast Asia[2] that belongs to the lycaenids or blues family. The species was first described by Jean-Baptiste Godart in 1823.

Description[edit]

Male[edit]

Upperside: dull purple; bases of the wings suffused with blue; both forewings and hindwings with well-marked jet-black anteciliary lines, that on the forewing expand slightly at the apex. Hindwing: the costal margin above vein 7 and the dorsal margin below vein 1a fuscous brown; irregular, transverse, sub-terminal black spots in interspaces 1 to 3, those in interspaces 1 and 2 much larger than that in interspace 3; posterior basal area covered with long purplish-brown hairs. Cilia of both forewings and hindwings brown.[3]

Underside: purplish brown with a smooth satiny lustre. Forewing: a short band on the discocellulars, a transverse comparatively broad discal band with very sinuate margins, and a subterminal, continuous, lunular, much narrower band; the former two brown, of a shade darker than the ground colour, the subterminal band fuscous black; the band on the discocellulars and the discal band edged narrowly with white both on the inner and outer sides, the subterminal band very obscurely similarly edged on the outer side only. Hindwing: somewhat densely sprinkled with black scales at extreme base and crossed transversely by seven or eight very irregular lines of slender white lunules; the outer two lines outwardly concave, the others outwardly convex, each lunule of the inner line of the former two series touching the corresponding lunule of the line next to it on the inner side, so that in each interspace the two touching lines of lunules seem to form a series of markings like X; finally, a white-edged black spot in the middle of the dorsum and another subterminal black spot crowned inwardly with orange in interspace 3. Both forewings and hindwings with slender jet-black anteciliary lines and brown cilia, the anteciliary line on the hindwing edged inwardly and outwardly by a white thread.[3]

Antennae black, the shafts speckled with white; head, thorax and abdomen purplish brown.[3]

Female[edit]

Upperside: brown, the bases of the wings glossed with pale violet-blue on the forewing, in some specimens extended for two-thirds the length of the wing but always more or less of a broad margin of the ground colour is left along the costa, a still broader margin along the term en and a narrow edging along the dorsum; on the hindwing the blue gloss rarely extends further than the basal third. Both forewings and hindwings with slender anteciliary black lines, that on the hindwing posteriorly is inwardly margined with a thread of white, on the inner side of which again and touching it are three or four conical or triangular small black spots in the interspaces. Cilia of both wings pale brown.[3]

Underside: ground colour slightly paler, markings similar.[3]

Antennae blackish brown, the shafts speckled with white as in the male; head, thorax and abdomen brown; beneath: the palpi, thorax and abdomen paler brown.[3][4]

Larva[edit]

When full-fed 0.62 of an inch in length, somewhat dark green in colour (of a darker shade than most Lycaenid larvae), smooth and shining, the whole surface covered with minute pits to be seen only under a strong magnifying-glass. The head is very small and retractile as usual and of a pale green colour; the second segment is unmarked, the third to sixth segments inclusive have some obscure reddish-brown dorsal blotches, the three following segments are unmarked, the tenth to twelfth segments have somewhat similar blotches to those on the third to the sixth segments, but they are more distinct and darker in shade. There is a pale yellow lateral line just above the legs. All the segments are irregularly and broadly pitted at the sides; these pits seem to assume more or less the form of a longitudinal subdorsal depression, below which to the lateral line the colour of the insect is slightly paler. The whole larva is much depressed, somewhat wider than high and seems to gradually increase in breadth to the tenth segment, the last segment is almost as broad and rounded. The larva varies greatly in colour and markings, some being pale green throughout and unmarked, others again are reddish brown throughout. It feeds in Calcutta on Nephelium litchi, Cassia fistula, and Heynea trijuga, and not improbably, as it feeds on so many bushes, it will eat others. Dr. Forel identifies the ant which attends the larva as Oecophylla smaragdina, Fabr., the large red and green ant which makes immense nests of growing leaves in trees. (Lionel de Nicéville quoted by Bingham)[3]

Pupa[edit]

0.4 of an inch in length, of the usual Lyccenid shape, the tail pointed, the thorax slightly humped and ending in a somewhat sharp ridge line on the back; it is coloured pale ochraceous and bears a prominent diamond-shaped mark posteriorly, It is smooth throughout, reddish brown sprinkled with minute darker dots. (de Nicéville)[3]

Subspecies[edit]

Listed alphabetically:[2]

  • Anthene emolus andamanicus (Fruhstorfer, 1916) – (Andamans)
  • Anthene emolus emolus – (north-western Himalayas to Myanmar, Thailand, Laos, Vietnam, Hainan, southern Yunnan)
  • Anthene emolus goberus (Fruhstorfer, 1916) – (Thailand, Peninsular Malaya, Singapore, Sumatra, Borneo, Hainan)
  • Anthene emolus javanus (Fruhstorfer, 1916) – (Java, Sumbawa)
  • Anthene emolus minor (van Eecke, 1918) – (Pulao Babi)
  • Anthene emolus modesta (Staudinger, 1889) – (Palawan)

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ R. K., Varshney; Smetacek, Peter (2015). A Synoptic Catalogue of the Butterflies of India. New Delhi: Butterfly Research Centre, Bhimtal & Indinov Publishing. p. 126. doi:10.13140/RG.2.1.3966.2164. ISBN 978-81-929826-4-9.
  2. ^ a b Savela, Markku, ed. (November 5, 2018). "Anthene emolus (Godart, [1824])". Lepidoptera and Some Other Life Forms. Retrieved October 14, 2020.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Public Domain One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain: Bingham, C. T. (1907). The Fauna of British India, Including Ceylon and Burma: Butterflies Volume II. London: Taylor and Francis, Ltd. pp. 373–375.
  4. ^ Public Domain One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain: Swinhoe, Charles (1910–1911). Lepidoptera Indica: Volume VIII. London: Lovell Reeve and Co. pp. 55–57.

External links[edit]

  • Takanami, Yusuke & Seki, Yasuo (2001). "Genus Anthene". A Synonymic List of Lycaenidae from the Philippines. Archived from the original on June 30, 2001 – via Internet Archive. With images.