Catonephele acontius

Catonephele acontius, the Acontius firewing, is a nymphalid butterfly species found in South America. It was first described by Carl Linnaeus in 1771 (who gave the type location as "China", a designation followed by some later authors).

Catonephele acontius
Male
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Family: Nymphalidae
Genus: Catonephele
Species:
C. acontius
Binomial name
Catonephele acontius
(Linnaeus, 1771)
Synonyms
  • Papilio acontius Linnaeus, 1771
  • Papilio antiochus Fabricius, 1775 (nec Linnaeus)
  • Papilio medea Fabricius, 1775 (nec Cramer)
  • Papilio chione Cramer, [1776]
  • Papilio eupalemon Cramer, [1777]
  • Catonephele eupalemaena Hübner, [1819]
  • Catonephele acontius exquisitus Stichel, 1899

Description

(Male, described by Dru Drury): Upperside. Antennae, head, thorax, and abdomen black. Wings fine velvety black. An orange-coloured bar, about 14 inch (6 mm) broad, rises in the middle of the superior wings, running circularly and crossing the inferior ones, meeting about the middle of the abdominal edges.

Underside. Palpi white. Tongue brown. Breast and legs white. Abdomen yellow brown. Wings shining brown, exhibiting various shades of changeable colours; the tips terminating in an ash colour. Wings scarcely dentated. Wingspan 2 34 inches (70 mm).[1]

Subspecies

  • Catonephele acontius acontius (Guianas, Surinam, Brazil: Amazonas)
  • Catonephele acontius caeruleus Jenkins, 1985 (Bolivia)
gollark: I mean, 2^32 is actually within tractable computation range for modern computers (it's 2 billion or so, and my laptop can probably manage 8GIPS (giga-instructions per second) sequentially).
gollark: This is the problem - with ones which are too long they can't be really tested.
gollark: In decently general-purpose programming languages with access to more space, you can construct ridiculously large numbers by implementing ↑ and all that.
gollark: Not without extra imports or something. or maybe python2.
gollark: Probably.

References

  1. Drury, Dru (1837). Westwood, John (ed.). Illustrations of Exotic Entomology. 3. p. 9. pl. VII.


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