Cephrenes augiades

Cephrenes augiades, the orange palm dart, is a butterfly of the family Hesperiidae. It is found from Indonesia to the Solomons.

Cephrenes augiades
Cephrenes augiades sperthias
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Order:
Family:
Genus:
Species:
C. augiades
Binomial name
Cephrenes augiades
(C Felder, 1860)
Synonyms
  • Hesperia augiades Felder, 1860
  • Hesperia palmarum Felder, 1862
  • Hesperia sperthias Felder, 1862
  • Hesperia macleayi Plötz, 1883
  • Corone ismenoides Mabille, 1878
  • Pamphila ulama Butler, 1870

The wingspan is about 40 mm.

The larvae of subspecies sperthias feed on Archontophoenix, Livistona and Phoenix species. During the day it hides within a shelter made by using silk to join fronds of its host plant, which fold together and bend across each other naturally.

Other recorded food plants include Acoelorrhaphe wrightii, Aiphanes corallina, Bentinckia nicobarica, Butia eriospatha, Calamus moti, Carpentaria acuminata, Carpoxylon macrospermum, Chamaedorea microspadix, Chrysalidocarpus cabadae, Clinostigma samoense, Crysophila guagara, Gaussia attenuata, Gronophyllum microcarpum, Gulubia macrospadix, Heterospathe delicatula, Heterospathe woodfordiana, Howea belmoreana, Livistona merrillii, Oenocarpus, Phoenix loureirii, Pinanga bataanensis, Pinanga coronata, Pinanga kuhlii, Pinanga merrillii, Pritchardia beccariana, Pritchardia maideniana, Pritchardia minor, Ptychosperma bleeseri, Ptychosperma furcatum, Ptychosperma lauterbachii, Ptychosperma lineare, Ptychosperma salomonense, Ptychosperma sanderianum, Ravenea rivularis, Rhapis excelsa, Rhopalostylis baueri, Rhopalostylis sapida, Roystonea venezuelana, Sabal mauritiiformis, Sabal mexicana, Sabal parvifolia, Sabal umbraculifera, Sabal uresana, Satakentia liukiuensis, Scheelea butyracea, Scheelea cephalotes, Scheelea zonensis, Syagrus amara, Syagrus comosa, Thrinax excelsa, Trachycarpus martianus, Trachycarpus wagneranus, Veitchia merrillii and Verschaffeltia splendida.

Subspecies

  • Cephrenes augiades augiades
  • Cephrenes augiades sperthias (C. Felder, 1862) (south-eastern coast of New South Wales and the northern Gulf and north-eastern coast of Queensland)
  • Cephrenes augiades tara Evans, 1935 (Batchian)
  • Cephrenes augiades arua Evans, 1935 (Papua)
  • Cephrenes augiades bruno Evans, 1935 (Papua)
  • Cephrenes augiades burua Evans, 1935 (Buru)
  • Cephrenes augiades meeki Evans, 1935 (Papua)
  • Cephrenes augiades tenimbra Evans, 1935
  • Cephrenes augiades websteri Evans, 1935 (New Britain)
gollark: Pretty wrong in that case though.
gollark: I mean, infohazards may exist, sure. I guess that may be true in general.
gollark: Plus, the more you have the more you can draw useful connections.
gollark: There's no real disadvantage to keeping additional knowledge around, and you cannot know in advance when a random fact might be useful.
gollark: The Ancient Greeks apparently went around calculating the Earth's size from some trigonometry and measurements of sun position.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.