Bothrinia chennellii

Bothrinia chennellii, the hedge Cupid,[1] is a small butterfly found in India that belongs to the lycaenids or blues family.

Hedge Cupid
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Family: Lycaenidae
Genus: Bothrinia
Species:
B. chennellii
Binomial name
Bothrinia chennellii
(De Nicéville, 1884)

Description

Male upperside: lavender blue, varying a little in depth of tint. Forewing: a very slender line along the costa and an even border to the termen from apex to tornus dusky black. Hindwing: costal and terminal margins with even dusky black borders, slightly broader on the costa than on the termen; on the latter the black border encloses a very indistinct series of round spots of the ground colour, each spot centred with black, which are more prominent posteriorly than anteriorly. Underside: bluish white, in some specimens slightly yellowish white; the markings small, delicate and very regular; the postdiscal transverse series of abbreviated lines on the forewing bisinuate and nearly as in C. lanka, but the series further from the termen and the short lines that compose it not quite end to end but a little en echelon one to the other; the terminal markings on both forewings and hindwings more or less obsolescent apparently at all seasons.

Female upperside: ground colour similar to that in the male. Forewing: costa, apex and termen very broadly dusky brownish black; over the blue area the dark veins are somewhat prominent, on the termen the black border occupies in some specimens more than one-third of the wing and in all is very even. Hindwing: the dark veins as conspicuous as on the forewing; anterior third of wing dusky black, termen with a well-marked anteciliary line and a more or less distinct and complete subterminal series of spots. Underside: as in the male. Antennae, head, thorax and abdomen in both sexes dusky black, the antennae ringed with white; beneath: palpi, thorax and abdomen white.[2]

Distribution

Recorded only from Shillong in Meghalaya and the northern Chin Hills in Upper Burma.

gollark: I mean, that statement is probably not made in a sincere "can you explain this to me, I do not understand" way, but as "haha look at [OTHER SIDE] believing silly things about walls".
gollark: Exactly! Near-meaningless gotchas!
gollark: Strictly speaking, no, but much of it doesn't really seem intended as information and doesn't exactly have a truth value.
gollark: Especially amongst people you really disagree with.
gollark: Actual good-faith discussion of facts is... not common.

See also

References

  1. "Bothrinia Chapman, 1909" at Markku Savela's Lepidoptera and some other life forms
  2. Bingham, C.T. (1907). The Fauna of British India, Including Ceylon and Burma. II (1st ed.). London: Taylor and Francis, Ltd.


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