Biology:Abisara bifasciata

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Short description: Species of butterfly

Abisara bifasciata
Abisara bifasciata suffusa Moore, 1882 – Suffused Double-banded Judy Life cycle at Peravoor on the foodplant embelia tsjeriam-cottam.jpg (62).jpg
Scientific classification edit
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Family: Riodinidae
Genus: Abisara
Species:
A. bifasciata
Binomial name
Abisara bifasciata
Moore, 1877[1]
Synonyms
  • Abisara angulata Moore, [1879]

Abisara bifasciata, the double-banded Judy[2] or twospot plum Judy,[3] is a butterfly in the family Riodinidae. It is found in Asia.[3][1][2][4][5]

Subspecies

  • Abisara bifasciata bifasciata (Andamans)
  • Abisara bifasciata angulata Moore, [1879] (Sikkim, Manipur, Nagaland to Myanmar)
  • Abisara bifasciata suffusa Moore, 1882 (India)[3][1][2]

Description

Male on the left and female on the right
Male. Upperside rich ferruginous-brown. Forewing darker brown externally; with an indistinct small subapical black spot with white pupil; a very large prominent lower black ocellus, with large white pupil, broadly surrounded externally with bright ferruginous-red, which latter colour forms an irregular discal patch extending from the posterior margin and is anteriorly prolonged in front of the subapical spot to near the costa. Hindwing with four anteriorly decreasing moderately small black ocelli with white pupils and darker ferruginous-red outer rings. Cilia dark cinereous. Underside paler ferruginous-brown, more ochraceous brown externally. Both wings with the basal area marked with short dark ferruginous-brown strigae, and with a distinct darker brown transverse discal line, which is widely ochreous bordered externally at its costal end on the forewing, and narrowly with cinereous posteriorly on both wings. Forewing with a minute subapical and a small lower median ocellus, and sometimes a white dot is also present between the upper and middle median veins. Hindwing with six very small ocelli, the four upper and the lowest being minute.

Male with a subbasal tuft of brown hairs overlapping a small glandular patch of blach scales on the upperside of hindwing, and on the underside of the forewing with a large basal nacreous area with a very slight ordinary glandular patch of blackish scales.

Female larger. Upperside of somewhat brighter colours; all the ocelli larger and more prominent. Underside paler than in the male, the transverse discal line on both wings broadly diffused externally with paler ochreous anteriorly and cinereous posteriorly; ocelli the same as in male.

Body above dark brown; abdomen beneath, legs, and streaks on sides of palpi pale ochreous-brown.

References

Wikidata ☰ Q4667925 entry