Observations on the Biology of Afrotropical Hesperiidae (Lepidoptera). Part 8. Hesperiinae incertae sedis: Dracaena Feeders
Author
Cock, Matthew J. W.
Author
Congdon, T. Colin E.
Author
Collins, Steve C.
text
Zootaxa
2015
2015-07-13
3985
3
301
348
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.3985.3.1
0a09b779-2166-4305-9d3e-53effb06f108
1175-5326
253532
46DE9DD6-55E3-4BF5-A2AF-A058A0294A72
Artitropa comus
Stoll
, [1782]
Although the original
type
locality was given by
Stoll (
1780
–1782) as
Surinam
, this was an error, and the
type
locality is accepted as West Africa (
Ackery
et al
. 1995
). This is the only species of the genus in West Africa (
Larsen 2005
), and its distribution extends east to
Cameroon
,
Republic of Congo
,
Gabon
and
DR Congo
(
Ackery
et al
. 1995
,
Larsen 2005
).
Heath
et al
.’s (2002)
record from
Zambia
(‘Hillwood (Ikelenge) (ABRI)’) was based on a misidentification for
A. reducta
. In
Cameroon
and
Congo
its range overlaps with
A. reducta
, which for many years was considered a subspecies. In his simplified provisional check-list of the butterflies of the Afrotropical region,
Carcasson (1981)
first treated
reducta
Riley
as a valid species separate from
A. comus
, but gave no explanation. This situation remained unchanged when Carcasson’s catalogue was published by
Ackery
et al
. (1995)
, and was endorsed by
Larsen (2005)
. Given that the two species overlap in
Cameroon
and the
Congo
, their separation seems
a priori
to be justified.
Most of
Riley’s (1925)
information on the early stages of ‘
A. comus
’ is, given the locality (
Uganda
), actually referable to
A. reducta
, which Riley treated as a subspecies of
A. comus
. However, Riley goes on to point out that the early stages of
A. comus
are similar based on preserved material from Lagos in the Oxford University Museum. Riley does not explicitly state the food plant of the Lagos material, which he states comprises a male and five females reared by Dr. W.A. Lamborn. MJWC examined this material in HEC; it actually comprises four females from Dr Lamborn, two of which were reared from pupae, all from near Oni,
70 miles
east of Lagos (cf.
Gamia buchholzi
above), and two males and a female caught in Lagos by J.A. de Gaye in 1912. The two reared females were collected as pupae ‘in forest,
Sep 1911
, and there is no indication as to the food plant. There are associated emerged pupae for both, of which one has the associated cast final caterpillar skin and head capsule. The head markings and spot on T1 are comparable to those shown below for
A. reducta
(
Figures 18–21
).
The food plant records of
Le Pelley (1959)
,
Sevastopulo (1974
,
1975
),
Van Someren (1974)
,
Carcasson (1981)
,
Ackery
et al
. (1995)
,
Heath
et al
. (2002)
, etc. are considered to refer to
A. reducta
.
In 1994, MJWC found a dead final instar caterpillar and a pupa killed by a parasitoid with the cast final instar skin on a
Dracaena
sp. at Toumodi, near Yamoussoukro,
Côte d’Ivoire
. The caterpillar head was similar to that of
A. reducta
(below): 3.65 x
4.2mm
wide x high; pale brown with yellow flush on face; rugose, no obvious setae; large oval dark spot on each epicranium, the lower inner margin adjacent to upper adfrontals; posterior margin, sutures, adfrontals and frons all ground colour; pronotum pale with a dark spot laterally. The pupa was similar to those of other
Artitropa
spp.: unmarked pale brown; erect pale brown setae in small patch on T3 dorsum, directed backwards, and in line down centre of eye. The pupa had a single
1.6mm
diameter parasitoid emergence hole cut in the front of the head.
The first unequivocal published food plant record for
A. comus
is that of
Vuattoux (1999)
who reared a dozen on
D. mannii
(as
D. perrottetii
). We can find no significant differences between the early stages of
A. comus
and those of
A. reducta
(
Figures 18–21
). SCC has found early stages of
A. comus
in several countries in west and central Africa on a variety of
Dracaena
spp., including exotics, including
D. fragrans
in
Liberia
, at Obudu, eastern
Nigeria
(
April 2007
) and in
Cameroon
,
D. mannii
in
Ghana
and
Côte d’Ivoire
, and
D. arborea
on Bioko (
Dec 2011
). They can be horticultural pests of ornamental
Dracaena
spp., and adults have been observed to come to light.