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Papilio jacksoni
Species of butterfly From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Papilio jacksoni, the Jackson's swallowtail, is a butterfly of the family Papilionidae. It is found in Africa.
The female adults mimic Amauris echeria and relatives.
The larvae feed on Clausena, Toddalia and Clausena anisata.
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Description

"Male as in ssp. echerioides, but black more sooty, median band narrower, reduced to very well separated spots in forewing, white with faint ochreous tinge. Female as in echerioides, but white apical spot does not touch the margin; white spots in hindwing in both sexes well inside margin." (Robert Herbert Carcasson, 1960).
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Subspecies
- Papilio jacksoni jacksoni (Kenya (highlands), eastern Uganda)
- Papilio jacksoni ruandana Le Cerf, 1924[3] (Zaire, eastern Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi)
- Papilio jacksoni hecqui Berger, 1954 [4] (north-eastern Zaire)
- Papilio jacksoni kungwe Cottrell, 1963[5] (western Tanzania)
- Papilio jacksoni nyika Cottrell, 1963 (Nyika Plateau in northern Malawi and eastern Zambia)
- Papilio jacksoni imatonga Clifton & Collins, 1997 (Imatong Mountains in south-western Sudan)
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Taxonomy
Papilio jacksoni is a member of the echerioides species group. This clade includes:
- Papilio echerioides Trimen, 1868
- Papilio fuelleborni Karsch, 1900
- Papilio jacksoni Sharpe, 1891
- Papilio sjoestedti Aurivillius, 1908
Etymology
It was named for the collector Frederick John Jackson in "Descriptions of New Butterflies collected by Mr. F. J. Jackson, F.Z.S:, in British East Africa, during his recent Expedition. Part I & II" Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London 1891 : 187-194, pl. 16-17, : 633-638, pl. 48.
References
External links
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