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Euploea sylvester

Species of butterfly From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Euploea sylvester
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Euploea sylvester, the double-branded crow,[2] also known as the two-brand crow[1] in Australia, is a butterfly found in South Asia,[2] Southeast Asia and parts of Australia that belongs to the crows and tigers, that is, the danaid group of the brush-footed butterflies family.[1]

Quick facts Double-branded crow, Scientific classification ...

Several races of the butterfly are recognized. Race pelor is found in Australia.[3]

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Subspecies

The subspecies of Euploea sylvester are-[1][2]

  • E. s. sylvester - Cape York - Rockhampton, Torres Strait Is.
  • E. s. coreta (Godart, 1819) - Sri Lanka, S.India
  • E. s. hopei (Felder & Felder, 1865) - Sikkim - Burma, Assam, Indo-China, Peninsular Malaya
  • E. s. swinhoei - Taiwan
  • E. s. pelor Doubleday, 1847 - NW.Australia, Northern Territory

Description

Thumb
Museum specimen from Malaya

In shape, colour, and markings, it very closely resembles Euploea core. Males, however, can be distinguished at once by the presence of two brands instead of a single one on the forewing. Of the females Lionel de Nicéville says, females of E. coreta can be separated from the females of E. core by the following points: "First by the outline of the forewing being more entire; in core it is slightly but perceptibly scalloped- Second, by the underside of the forewing having a complete series of six spots, one between each pair of nervules outside the cell; in core two of these spots, those above the discoidal nervules (veins 5 and 6), are always wanting. Third, the two brands on the interno-median area (interspace 1) of the forewing in the male are faintly but quite perceptibly to be traced in the female in the same position."[4][5]

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Larval food plants

The double-banded crow feeds on plants of the families Apocynaceae (dogbanes and oleanders) including Parsonsia, Hoya, and Cynanchum,[6] Asclepiadaceae (milkweeds) including Marsdenia[7] and Moraceae (figs) including Ficus obliqua, Ficus microcarpa, Ficus racemosa, Gymnema sylvestre and Ichnocarpus frutescens [8]

See also

References

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