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Battus belus

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Battus belus
Mounted specimen of Battus belus, male. On display at Museo di Scienze Naturali Enrico Caffi, Bergamo
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
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Species:
B. belus
Binomial name
Battus belus
(Cramer, 1777)
Synonyms
  • Papilio belus Cramer, 1777
  • Papilio numitor Cramer, [1777]
  • Papilio amulius Esper, 1792
  • Papilio caburi Kaye, 1906
  • Papilio heteropterus Zikán, 1937
  • Papilio belus chalceus Rothschild & Jordan, 1906

Battus belus, commonly known as the Belus Swallowtail is a species of butterfly from the family Papilionidae that is found in Brazil, Colombia, Guatemala, Peru and Venezuela.[1]

Description

Battus belus is a large Butterfly with a wingspan of 80 mm to 100 mm. The wings are without a tail. The upperside is black widely suffused structural green or blue-green, with variable white patches and bands. The underside is pearl sheened brown with a submarginal row of small white dots and big red chevrons. The caterpillars are brown marked with black.

"Forewing of the male without white spots on the upper surface; hindwing with one to seven white spots on the disc, the first of which is always large; the forewing of the female is similar to that of the male or it has a large pale yellow area. Hindwing beneath in both sexes with white dots outside the red submarginal spots".[2]

Subspecies

  • Battus belus belus (Guyanas, Surinam) In the male the hindwing has usually only one white spot, yet specimens occur which have a row of small spots in the disc. Two forms of the female are known; female-f. belus Cr. is similar to the male and has on the hindwing either only one spot or a complete row; in ab. amulius Esp. the spots on the undersurface of the hindwing are yellow. The second variety of the female is female-f. amazonis R. and J.; it has a yellow area on the forewing like the female-f. varus of the subspecies varus Koll. See also Möhn, 1999, Butterflies of the World 5: 8, plate 12, figures 1-2.[3]
  • Battus belus varus (Kollar, 1850) (Guatemala to Venezuela, Colombia, Peru, Brazil: Amazonas) Hindwing with a band of spots diminishing in width posteriorly. The female occurs in two forms. The common form is female-f. latinus Fldr., it is similar to the male, but the forewing has some submarginal spots and the first spot of the band of the hindwing is about as large as the second. The very rare form with large yellowish area on the forewing, occupying the extremity of the cell and the adjacent part of the disc, is female-f varus Koll. See also Möhn, 1999, Butterflies of the World 5: 8, plates 12, figures 5-8, plate 14, figure 4, plate 20, figures 1-2
  • Battus belus belemus (Bates, 1864) (Brazil: Pará, Amazonas) Has a straight band on the hindwing; only the form of the male similar to the female is known.See also Möhn, 1999, Butterflies of the World 5: 8, plate 12, figure 3
  • Battus belus cochabamba (Weeks, 1901) (Bolivia, Peru) Hindwing usually with a broad straight macular band; sometimes the last five spots small, very rarely wanting.See also Möhn, 1999, Butterflies of the World 5: 8, plate 13, figures 1-8, plate 14, figures 1-3, plate 20, figures 3-4.Smart, 1976 The Illustrated Encyclopedia of the Butterfly World page 159 fig. 18 [4]
  • Battus belus aureochloris Brown, 1994 (Brazil: Pará) See also Möhn, 1999, Butterflies of the World 5: 8, plate 12, figure 4.

Biology

Lives in rainforest. The larvae feed on Aristolochia species. "The male is called by Bates a swift and bold flier; the female with yellow area on the forewing he found on flowers at the edge of the forest. The females are much more rarely caught than the males". (Jordan, 1907)

Distribution

This species is widespread in the Neotropical ecozone.

References

  1. ^ Battus at Funet
  2. ^ Jordan, K. , in Seitz, A. ( 1907) . The Macrolepidoptera of the World. 5: The Macrolepidoptera of the American faunistic region. Papilionidae 1-45
  3. ^ Edwin Möhn, 2002 Schmetterlinge der Erde, Butterflies of the world Part V (5), Papilionidae II:Battus. Edited by Erich Bauer and Thomas Frankenbach Keltern : Goecke & Evers ; Canterbury : Hillside Books.ISBN 978-3-931374-70-9 Illustrates and identifies 14 species and 49 subspecies.
  4. ^ Paul Smart, 1976 The Illustrated Encyclopedia of the Butterfly World in Color.London, Salamander:Encyclopedie des papillons. Lausanne, Elsevier Sequoia (French language edition) ISBN 9780948427046 ISBN 0600313816.
  • Lewis, H. L., 1974 Butterflies of the World ISBN 0-245-52097-X Page 23, figure 1.