Butterflies (Lepidoptera: Papilionoidea) of Mount Kilimanjaro: family Pieridae, subfamily Pierinae
Author
Liseki, Steven D.
Tanzania Wildlife Research Institute, Arusha, Tanzania; & School of Anthropology and Conservation, Durrell Institute of Conservation and Ecology, University of Kent, Canterbury, UK;
Author
Vane-Wright, Richard I.
School of Anthropology and Conservation, Durrell Institute of Conservation and Ecology, University of Kent, Canterbury, UK; & Life Sciences, Natural History Museum, London, UK; & Geographical and Life Sciences, Canterbury Christ Church University, Canterbury, UK
text
Journal of Natural History
2014
2014-04-28
48
25 - 26
1543
1583
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00222933.2014.886343
journal article
10.1080/00222933.2014.886343
1464-5262
5193830
Nepheronia thalassina
(Boisduval, 1836)
Kielland 1990: 266
(1 fig).
Larsen 1996
: pl. 5, figs 40 i,ii.
d’ Abrera 1997: 71
(5 figs). SI: Figure 20e–j.
Forewing length: male
31–36 mm
(mean (
n
= 5)
34.2 mm
,
SD
= 1.564); female
32– 38 mm
(mean (
n
= 9)
35.47 mm
,
SD
= 1.517).
Records.
From Mpanda to Ugandan border, Northern Highlands, Pare Mts, Usambara Mts, Uluguru Mts, Turiani, Nguu forests, Image Mt, Mwanihana forest, Ukaguru Mts, Kiono forest, Pugu hills, Dendene, Masagati and the Rondo plateau, from sea level up to
1700 m
(
Kielland 1990
, p.54). On
Kilimanjaro
it evidently does not penetrate into the forest reserve area, being confined to the lower slopes (records in BMNH from Moshi and New Moshi, and from
Kilimanjaro
at
4500–5000 ft
). Outside
Tanzania
, found in forest and dense woodland across central Africa (
Ackery et al. 1995
, p.181). There is debate as to whether this species is polytypic or not – here we follow
Berger (1981
, p.80) and
Kielland (1990)
in regarding it as monotypic (if divided into subspecies, then the
Kilimanjaro
population belongs to
N. t. sinalata
(Suffert, 1904) – treated by
Berger 1981
, as a form).
There are two forms of female
N. thalassina
in
Tanzania
: white (typical), and piebald (f. “sinalata”). Typical females tend to have some pinkish-grey at the forewing base, and yellowish at the base of the hindwing. Form “sinalata” may or may not have the colour at the base of the forewing; the hindwing is all yellow. Some females of both forms have a flush of yellow at the base of the forewing beneath. Elsewhere a few other female forms occur, such as “verulanus” in
Cameroon
. In life, males are notable for their pale blue ground colour, and both sexes have a nacreous sheen to the underside, which aids separation of female forms of this species from those of
N. argia
(
Larsen 1996
, p.126)