Observations on the biology of Afrotropical Hesperiidae (Lepidoptera). Part 7. Hesperiinae incertae sedis: grass and bamboo feeders
Author
Cock, Matthew J. W.
Author
Congdon, T. Colin E.
text
Zootaxa
2014
3872
4
301
354
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.3872.4.1
3278c375-6c89-42a2-b7ac-24b9bb91730e
1175-5326
251860
8FECCFC1-7CA9-4A90-B881-4BD40157AD99
Chondrolepis telisignata
Butler, 1896
One centre of distribution for this species is the Central Highlands of
Kenya
, but there are disjunct populations in the Teita Hills of
Kenya
, South
Tanzania
(Iringa and Mbeya Districts) and Nyika Plateau, on the
Malawi
/
Zambia
border (the
type
locality) (
Evans 1937
,
De Jong 1986
,
Heath
et al
. 2002
). A single outlier specimen from Mabira Forest,
Uganda
needs confirmation (
De Jong 1986
). Of the
242 specimens
De Jong examined, all but 18 were from
Kenya
. MJWC reared this species from around Nairobi, but at slightly higher altitudes (Tigoni, Muguga, Ngong Hills) and Thompson’s Falls (near Nyahururu, Central
Kenya
).
Adult behaviour
In the Central Highlands of
Kenya
it is fairly common in woodland. Males and females can be found in open woodland or along tracks of more dense woodland settled on grass or low vegetation. When disturbed they often only fly a short distance before settling again. The white markings of the male underside are both striking and distinctive in the field, although females can only be recognised when at rest. Males, at least, will fly quite late in the afternoon, and when the sky is heavily overcast.
Food plants
MJWC has found caterpillars of this species on broad leaved grasses
Setaria sulcata
(=
poiretiana
) (Tigoni Woods, 87/5) and
S. megaphylla
(=
plicatilis
) (Muguga, 88/89, 88/103), a medium leaved grass?
Cenchrus
(=
Pennisetum
) sp. (Thomson’s Falls, Nyahururu, 90/124, 90/126), and a quite narrow leaved grass, identified as either
Helictotrichon elongatum
or
Ehrharta erecta
var.
abyssinica
(Ngong Hills, 89/71).
Leaf shelters
The young caterpillar makes a shelter by cutting two notches from the edge of the leaf, and folding the flap created under or over; feeding continues to extend the basal notch (87/5). Larger caterpillars make their shelters by rolling the basal half of the leaf lamina upwards along the mid-rib. The pupa is formed in a rolled leaf, sealed tightly at each end of the shelter; the area anterior to the pupa is blocked with a loose waxy flocculence.
FIGURE 28.
Caterpillars of
Chondrolepis telisignata
, collected on grasses, Kenya.
1
, penultimate instar, detail of head; collected on either
Helictotrichon elongatum
or
Ehrharta erecta
var.
abyssinica
, Ngong Hills
, 1 Oct 1989; moulted to penultimate instar 6 Oct; photographed 8 Oct; moulted to final instar 15 Oct; 89/71;
2
, penultimate instar, detail of head; collected 29 Sep 1988 on
Setaria megaphylla
, south Muguga Forest, moulted to penultimate instar 31 Oct; photographed 1 Nov; moulted to final instar 9 Nov; 13mm; 88/89;
3
, final instar collected as #2; moulted to final instar 9 Nov; photographed 12 Nov; pupal shelter 30 Nov; 16mm; 88/89;
4
, final instar, dorsolateral view, collected on
Setaria megaphylla
, 28 Oct 1988, south Muguga Forest; moulted to final instar and photographed 19 Nov; 88/103A.
Caterpillar
The young caterpillars, like many grass feeders, are green with a black head. In the n-2 instar the head is 1.30 x
1.43mm
wide x high (n=5) dark brown to black, shiny; rounded, indent at vertex; scattered inconspicuous pale erect setae. Pronotum narrow, black; body translucent dull green, whitish ventrally. One penultimate instar caterpillar (88/89, Figure 28.2) had the head rounded oval; light brown with an inverted dark M on face, sharp against the adfrontals, but broad and diffuse on epicrania; posterior margin of head black, widening basally to stemmata. Pronotum narrow, black; body translucent dull green; dorsal line clear, bordered by yellowish suffusion; posterior segments tinged brown. Another penultimate instar (89/71, Figure 28.1) had the dark marking on the head more extensive, reaching the apices and vertex, laterally in a broad band above stemmata, and on the upper half of the adfrontals. The heads of three penultimate instar caterpillars averaged 1.74 x
2.10mm
wide x high.
FIGURE 29.
Pupa of
Chondrolepis telisignata
collected 1 Oct 1989 on
Helictotrichon elongatum
or
Ehrharta erecta
var.
abyssinica
, Ngong Hills
; pupated 29 Oct; photographed 30 Oct; adult female 14 Nov; 19mm; 89/71.
1
, dorsal view;
2
, ventrolateral view; 3, ventral view.
In the final instar, the inverted M on the face is characteristic amongst the known members of the genus (Figures 28.3–4). The following is based primarily on caterpillar 88/89 (Figure 28.3), which measured
16mm
at the time; head 2.1 x
2.65mm
wide x high (n=5); ground colour light brown; posterior margin dark, widening to stemmata; dark, inverted M shape on face: narrowly dark each side of epicranial suture from below vertex, extending externally to half way down adfrontals, and from lower end a vertical line on epicranium to well short of apex. Body translucent; green with a tinge of orange dorsally, stronger in a corrugated section on posterior margin of each segment; A1–A9 a single black dorsolateral dot on each segment; dorsal line A1–A9 clear, dark and conspicuous; anal plate semi-circular with scattered pale setae; ventrum paler; legs and spiracles concolorous with body. The penultimate and final instars took 10 and 20 days respectively under Nairobi conditions.
Pupa
The following is based on pupa 89/71 (
Figure 29
):
19 mm
; ground colour light brown, head and dorsal thorax darker; a small, dark, slightly down-curved frontal projection of
0.6mm
; brown cremaster broad and rounded, not attached to lining of shelter; brown proboscis sheath extends
3–6mm
beyond the wing cases, in the latter case just short of cremaster; T1 spiracle dark brown, conspicuous; dark stripe through eye; tufts of brown setae around cremaster; head and prothorax with white waxy bloom. The pupal period took 18 days; female 89/71 was noted to emerge at 07.30h.