Observations on the Biology of Afrotropical Hesperiidae (Lepidoptera) with particular reference to Kenya. Part 11. Heteropterinae
Author
Cock, Matthew J. W.
Author
Congdon, T. Colin E.
text
Zootaxa
2017
4226
4
487
508
journal article
37249
10.11646/zootaxa.4226.4.3
1bb0d3bf-fac9-4d4c-8d95-af3e2f12ddeb
1175-5326
265090
8753ADEF-2888-46CD-A6DE-6BDF9D3CE0DC
Metisella
Hemming, 1934
Hemming (1934)
introduced this genus name for the Afrotropical species which had previously been placed in the genera
Cyclopides
Hübner
(a genus now restricted to the Palaearctic Region) and
Watsonia
Tutt
(an unavailable homonym). The
type
species is
M. metis
(Linnaeus)
. The genus is restricted to the African mainland (
Ackery
et al
. 1995
), since although
M. malgacha
(Boisduval)
was described from
Madagascar
, this is considered a false
type
locality for this
South
African species (
Evans 1937
,
Viette 1956
,
Ackery
et al
. 1995
,
Lees
et al
. 2003
).
The genus currently includes about 22 species, mostly occurring in eastern and southern Africa (
Ackery
et al
. 1995
). R. de Jong plans to complete a revision of the genus, which he started many years ago, and we can anticipate that although there will be significant taxonomic changes, it will be straightforward to relate our species to the revision.
Several
South
African species have been reared from various grasses and one species from mountain bamboo (
Bergbambos tesselata
) (
Table 1
). In addition
Clark (1940)
provides a description and monotone plate of the complete life history of
M. metis
(Linnaeus)
, G.C. Clark (in
Dickson & Kroon 1978
) provides detailed colour illustrations of the full life cycle of
Metisella malgacha malgacha
(Boisduval)
,
M. metis paris
Evans,
Henning
et al
. (1997)
include photographs of the caterpillar and pupa of
M. malgacha malgacha
and
M. metis
,
and
Henning & Roos (2001)
and
Roos & Henning (2002)
include a partial life history description of
Metisella meninx
(Trimen)
, the latter with photographs of the ova and first two instars.
TABLE 1
. Recorded
Poaceae
food plants of
Metisella
spp. from South Africa.
Metisella
sp. Food plants References
Metisella malgacha
Grasses
Murray 1959
;
Dickson & Kroon 1978
malgacha
(Boisduval)
Ehrharta erecta
Murray 1959
;
Dickson & Kroon 1978
;
Henning
et al
.1997
;
Woodhall 2005
Metisella meninx
(Trimen) Unidentified
marsh grass
Henning
et al
.1997
;
Woodhall 2005
Leersia hexandra
Henning & Roos 2001
Metisella metis
(Cramer) Grasses
Platt 1921
,
Clark 1940
,
Murray 1959
Ehrharta erecta
Murray 1959
;
Dickson & Kroon 1978
;
Migdoll 1988
;
Pringle
et al
. 1994
;
Henning
et al
.1997
;
Woodhall 2005
Stenotaphrum secundatum
Murray 1959
;
Dickson & Kroon 1978
;
Migdoll 1988
; Pringle (=
S. glabrum
,
S. dimidiatum
)
et al
. 1994;
Henning
et al
.1997
;
Woodhall 2005
Panicum deustum
Dickson & Kroon 1978
;
Pringle
et al
. 1994
;
Henning
et al
.1997
;
Woodhall 2005
Stipa dregeana
Dickson & Kroon 1978
;
Migdoll 1988
;
Pringle
et al
. 1994
;
Henning
et al
.1997
;
Woodhall 2005
Setaria megaphylla
1
Henning
et al
.1997
;
Woodhall 2005
Metisella syrinx
(Trimen)
Bergbambos tesselata
Dickson & Kroon 1978
;
Henning & Henning 1989
; Pringle
et
(=
Thamnocalamus tesselatus
,
al
. 1994;
Henning
et al
.1997
;
Woodhall 2005
Arundinaria tesselata
)
1This may be a synonym of
S. sulcata
(Tropicos 2016)
.
Little was documented about the biology of this genus in
East
Africa until we started our studies.
Le Pelley (1959)
included no
Metisella
spp. in his list of
East
African agricultural pests, nor did
Van Someren (1974)
in his catalogue of the food plants of
East
African butterflies. In his list of
East
African
Lepidoptera
food plants
Sevastopulo (1975)
gave the food plants of
M. willemi
and
M. metis
as ‘grasses generally’; it is not clear what he meant when he listed
M. metis
as this is a species restricted to
South
Africa
(
Ackery
et al
. 1995
).
Sevastopulo (1981)
added no further records for
Metisella
spp. in his second list, and he did not document the life history of any in his rearing (Sevastopulo unpublished).
Kielland (1990)
stated that ‘little is known of the early stages, but many, if not all, may feed on grasses’ although he only gives one substantive record, i.e. grasses for
M. willemi
, doubtless taken from
Sevastopulo (1975)
.
Larsen (1991)
was able to include some of MJWC’s food plant records in his
Butterflies of
Kenya
, and based on these and the records from
South
Africa
(
Table 1
) concluded that the food plants are always grasses and bamboos, which he considered ‘almost certainly’ the case in
Larsen (2005)
. Similarly,
Heath
et al
. (2002)
indicate the food plants for all eight species of
Metisella
in
Zambia
are ‘presumably grass,
Ehrharta
species’. The published observations to date offer no reason to doubt the conclusion that this is a genus of grass and bamboo feeders.
This genus includes eight species found in the wooded highland areas of Kenya.
One species,
M. kakamega
De Jong
, is a Kenyan endemic known only from
Kakamega
Forest where it is rare and/or localised. Several others are localised on particular mountain ranges. We have reared six
Metisella
spp. in
Kenya
and
Tanzania
, and observed oviposition by a seventh. These partial life histories include five of the eight Kenyan species of
Metisella
.
In South Africa, recorded parasitoids of
M. metis paris
Evans
include
Apanteles
sp.,
Meteorus testaceus
Szepligeti (Braconidae)
as late larval parasitoids, and two tachinids,
Nemorilla cruciata
(Wiedemann)
and
Theocarcelia incedens
(Rondoni) as larval-pupal parasitoids (
Dickson & Kroon 1978, Plate 21
). The last named has also been reared from
Spialia ferax
(Wallengren)
(Pyrginae,
Carcharodini
) (
Dickson & Kroon 1978
).