Charaxes

The rajah and pasha butterflies, also known as emperors in Africa and Australia,[1][2] (genus Charaxes) make up the huge type genus of the brush-footed butterfly subfamily Charaxinae, or leafwing butterflies. They belong to the tribe Charaxini, which also includes the nawab butterflies (Polyura). Charaxes are tropical Old World butterflies, with by far the highest diversity in sub-Saharan Africa, a smaller number from South Asia to Melanesia and Australia, and a single species (C. jasius) in Europe. They are generally strong flyers and very popular among butterfly collectors.

Charaxes
C. solon at Mahim Nature Park, Mumbai
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Family: Nymphalidae
Tribe: Charaxini
Genus: Charaxes
Ochsenheimer, 1816
Species

Many, see text

Synonyms
  • Paphia Fabricius, 1807
  • Eriboea Hübner, [1819]
  • Jasia Swainson, 1832
  • Monura Mabille, 1877
  • Haridra Moore, [1880]
  • Zingha Hemming, 1939
  • Hadrodontes Stoneham, 1964
  • Stonehamia Cowan, 1968

Etymology

Charaxes means "to sharpen" or "to make pointed", referring to the pointed 'tails' on the hind wing. Charaxes may also be related to charax, meaning 'a sharp stake', or charaxis, a 'notch' or 'incision', which are also features of the hind wing.[3]

Biology

Charaxes frequent sunny forest openings and glades where they rest with open or partly open wings sunning themselves. When alerted, they close the wings exposing the cryptic underside. Certain favoured perches are selected and intruders are chased and driven off, Charaxes feed in part at oozes from tree wounds infested with beetle or other larvae and on rotting fruit (they come to hanging traps baited with fermenting banana). They lay their eggs on small understorey or marginal trees. Tender shoots are usually selected for egg laying but as the larvae grow they move to older leaves. Larvae rest on the upper surface of a leaf on which they have spun a protecting silk pad.

Photograph from Schultze, 1917 Die charaxiden und apaturiden der kolonie Kamerun illustrating aspects of Charaxes biology

The most striking features in the habits of Charaxes are the rapid flight, the partiality to putrid matter and the constancy with which a specimen returns to the same spot. Few species are found in the open country (C. pelias pelias, C. jasius and C. fabius), where there are only bushes and rarely trees; most species inhabit the more wooded country and some are found only in and near larger forests. The males come often in some numbers to water pools on roads; both sexes are fond of the juice of trees, decaying fruits, dung of animals and putrid meat and can successfully be entrapped by the use of such baits; one is known to come to flowers (C. zoolina).

The larvae feed variously on Rhamnaceae, Leguminosae, Sapindaceae, Melianthaceae, Euphorbiaceae, Gramineae, Ochnaceae, Lauraceae, Tiliaceae, Meliaceae, etc.[4]

Charaxes acraeoides is part of a mimetic ring with Pseudacraea and Acraea.

Life history

"We have examined the eggs of a number of species, taken from the bodies of dry specimens. Apart from size, there is no apparent difference in the eggs of the various species. The micropyle end is flattened, slightly concave, with the centre raised; from the centre radiate slight ribs, which gradually disappear at the sides and do not reach the base or underside; the longitudinal ribs are connected by extremely feeble transverse ridges, and bear, as Doherty correctly points out, small projecting points, which are easily visible under a good lens.

The slug-shaped caterpillar is widest in or before the middle, narrowed behind, and has a finely granulated skin. The head is flat, prognathous, and bears four processes which point backwards and are rough with tubercles, as is the hinder edge of the head between the processes; cheeks also tuberculated; the anal segment bears dorsally two more or less prominent processes, which are longer in the young larva than in the full-grown one. The colour of the larvae is generally green, often yellowish, the head bears, on each side, a light line which runs along the outer horn, and there is a spot on one or more abdominal segments, the colour of these latter markings, which are mostly more or less halfmoon-shaped, is as a rule buffish, the spots having often a darker (reddish or bluish) border. The caterpillar is a very slow creature, which does not voluntarily leave the twig on a leaf of which the egg was deposited.

The thick chrysalis is bright green as a rule, very smooth and shining, dorsally very convex; head bluntly bipartite; end of abdomen with two rounded tubercles ventrally."[5]

Description of the imago

Adult Charaxes have a robust thorax and abdomen. Their wingspan is around 8 to 10 cm. The ground colours of the wing uppersides vary from tawny to black to pale. Wing markings may be spots, bars or bands of white, orange or blue. Some species have metallic blue spots and others have an overall iridescent, metallic gloss. Charaxes zingha is partially red and Charaxes eupale is light green. The males of the Charaxes etheocles complex are largely black and are known as the "black Charaxes".

Various colours and shapes of Charaxes

The outer margin of the forewing varies from being nearly straight to deeply concave. The hindwing is abdominally always longer than costally, and in most species presents a triangular shape. The teeth on the distal (or outer) margin of both wings vary much according to species and groups of species, and is also not entirely constant within a species. The anal angle (wing corner) is in many species more pronounced than the outer margin between the tails, best seen in Charaxes zingha.

The pattern of the upperside is often very different in the sexes and in the various species. The females can be arranged according to the pattern of the upperside of the forewing into four groups:

  • Type 1: The discal and postdiscal interstices form a forked band, which is generally more or less interrupted at the veins into spots or patches. This is the normal type of female. There are many species in which the male has a similar band, but in this sex the patches composing the band are smaller than in the female.
  • Type 2: The upper discal interstitial patches become small or obsolete, while the postdiscal ones form together with the posterior discal ones an oblique band which extends from the costal to the internal margins. This type is found in both sexes of a number of species, and in the males of only a few others.
  • Type 3: The upper postdiscal interstitial spots are reduced in size or absent, while the discal interspaces and the posterior postdiscal ones form a broad curved band. This type does not occur in the male.
  • Type 4: The band is similar in appearance to that of type 3, but it is composed of the posterior postdiscal and discal interstices and the upper median ones, the band often entering the cell. This type is also confined to the female, and is met with only in one polychromatic species.

The underside is sometimes very colourful with orange, grey and auburn silver areas.

Sexual differences

Sexual dimorphism is among Charaxes a much commoner phenomenon than similarity of the sexes in colour and shape. The wings of the female are always broader than those of the male, and the hindwing is, as a rule, less triangular; the tails are broader, often widened at the end; in some species the male has one, the female two tails, in other the tails of the male are obliterated (absent), while the female possesses such an appendage.

Taxonomy

Charaxes wing
Venation terminology
Wing mark terminology

The taxonomy is complex with very many ranks (subspecies, forms and variants) and Charaxes demonstrates both allopatric and sympatric speciation. Splitters, possibly with commercial as well as entomological interests, have named very many forms – an example is Georges Rousseau-Decelle. "No group of African butterflies arouses stronger emotions than Charaxes. Gaining an understanding of their phylogenetic relationships will add a new chapter to their convoluted literature".[6]

Significant monographs on the taxonomy of Charaxes include:

  • Arthur Gardiner Butler – Monograph of the species of Charaxes, a genus of diurnal Lepidoptera. Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London 1865:622-639 (1866)
  • Walter Rothschild and Karl Jordan – A monograph of Charaxes and the allied prionopterous genera. Novitates Zoologicae 10:326-342. (1903)
  • Per Olof Christopher Aurivillius – Nymphalidae: Die Gross-schmetterlinge des Afrikanischen Faunengebietes. In: Seitz, A.: Die gross-schmetterlinge der erde. Eine systematische bearbeitung der bis jetzt bekannten gross-schmetterlinge XIII. Alfred Kernen Verlag, Stuttgart. (1925).
  • Victor Gurney Logan Van Someren – Revisional Notes on the African Charaxes. Pts 1–10. Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History) (Entomology) (1963-1975).

Van Someren studied long series of museum specimens, drawing attention, as had his predecessors, to the variability of Charaxes species over their often vast range, identifying and describing subspecies and isolating new species. This clinal variation is complicated by variation associated with climate (season), altitude and mimicry. Van Someren recognizes species groups, the analysis is in part subjective and the number of taxa remains uncertain.

The type species of the genus Charaxes is Charaxes jasius.[7]

Species groups

Cladogram of the basal subdivision of the genus Charaxes and its nearest relatives

Defining species groups is a convenient way of subdividing well-defined genera with a large number of recognized species. Charaxes species are so arranged in assemblages called "species groups" (not superspecies, but an informal phenetic arrangement). These may or may not be clades. As molecular phylogenetic studies continue, lineages distinct enough to warrant some formal degree of recognition become evident and new groupings are suggested, but consistent ranking remains a problem.

Species

In older literature, some of the nawab butterflies, such as Polyura dolon, may be included under Charaxes.

Species not found in the Afrotropical realm

Species found in the Afrotropical realm

Listed alphabetically.[1][8]

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References

  1. Woodhall, Steve (2005). Field Guide to Butterflies of South Africa. Cape Town, South Africa: Struik. ISBN 978-1-86872-724-7.
  2. Braby, Michael F. (2004). Complete Field Guide to Butterflies of Australia. CSIRO Publishing. pp. 174–175. ISBN 0643090274.
  3. Otto, Herbert. "Butterflies of the KNP". krugerpark.co.za. Retrieved 19 January 2019.
  4. "Robinson, G. S., P. R. Ackery, I. J. Kitching, G. W. Beccaloni & L. M. Hernández (2010). HOSTS - A Database of the World's Lepidopteran Hostplants. Natural History Museum, London".
  5. Rothschild, W. & Jordan, K. (1903). A monograph of Charaxes and the allied prionopterous genera. Novitates Zoologicae 10:326-342.
  6. Ackery P. R., Smith C. R., and Vane-Wright R. I. (eds.) (1995). Carcasson's African butterflies-An Annotated Catalogue of the Papilionidea and Hesperioidea of the Afrotropical Region. Canberra: CSIRO. A collated edited and amplified version of Carcasson's manuscripts. Included are species, genus group, species group and infra-subspecific names of Afrotropical butterflies and text on host plants, general reviews of bionomics, biology, biogeography and bibliography.
  7. Rydon, AHB (1971). "The Systematics of the Charaxidae (Lep. : Nymphaloidea)". The Entomologist's Record and Journal of Variation. London. 83: 219–233. Retrieved 15 March 2018. Pg. 220 "Recognising this fact, Ochsenheimer (1816, Schmett. Europa, vol. 4) removed Papilio jasius from Paphia, and placed it instead in his own genus Charaxes, thus making P. jasius the type-species of the latter by monotypy."
  8. "Charaxes Ochsenheimer, 1816" at Markku Savela's Lepidoptera and Some Other Life Forms
  9. Sp. nov. Endemic species of butterfly discovered at Kihansi, IPP Media
  • Aduse-Poku K., Vingerhoedt E., Wahlberg N., 2009. Out-of-Africa again: a phylogenetic hypothesis of the genus Charaxes (Lepidoptera: Nymphalidae) based on five gene regions. Mol Phylogenet Evol. 2009 Nov; 53(2): 463-78. doi: 10.1016/j.ympev.2009.06.021

Further reading

  • Darge, Philippe (1983). Fauna of Cameroon: The genus Charaxes, Sciences Nat, Venette, pp. 1–136, pl. 1-43. also as Le Genre Charaxes Ochs (Lepidoptera Charaxidae Doherty). Faune de la Republique Unie du Cameroon 1:1-136.
  • Henning, Stephen Frank (1989). The Charaxinae Butterflies of Africa Aloe Books. Johannesburg. ISBN 0-620-12811-9
  • Turlin, Bernard (2005-2007). Butterflies of the World. Erich Bauer, Thomas Franckenbach Parts 22, 25, 28, 32, Charaxes 1-4 Goecke & Evers ISBN 9783937783321.
  • Victor Gurney Logan Van Someren (1963-1975). Revisional Notes on the African Charaxes. Pts 1-10. 652 pages 148 plates. This page gives part details and links to full text and plates (monochrome photos).
  • Rothschild, W. and Jordan, K. (1898). A monograph of Charaxes and the allied prionopterous genera. Novitates Zoologicae Volume 5:545-601 ; 1899 Volume 6: 220-286 : 1900 Volume 7:287-524. Descriptions and plates (monochrome photos).
  • Müller, Chris J.; Wahlberg, Niklas; Beheregaray, Luciano B. (2010). After Africa: The evolutionary history and systematics of the genus Charaxes Ochsenheimer (Lepidoptera: Nymphalidae) in the Indo-Pacific region. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 100(2): 457–481.
  • Jacques Plantrou, Jacques (1973). Note sur les Charaxes de l'Afrique occidentale. 1 (Lep. Nymphalidae). Bulletin de la Société Entomologique de France 78 (7-8):268-276.
  • Plantrou, Jacques (1974). Note sur les Charaxes de l'Afrique occidentale, 2 (Lep. Nymphalidae). Bulletin de la Société Entomologique de France 79 (5-6):125-131.
  • Plantrou, Jacques (1983). Systématique biogéographie et évolution des Charaxes africains (Lepidoptera Nymphalidae) Paris, Ecole normale supérieure, Laboratoire de zoologie (Series:Publications du Laboratoire de zoologie, Ecole normale supérieure, no 25.) ISBN 9782728800926.
  • Aduse-Poku K, Vingerhoedt E, Wahlberg N. (2009). Out-of-Africa again: a phylogenetic hypothesis of the genus Charaxes (Lepidoptera: Nymphalidae) based on five gene regions. Mol Phylogenet Evol. 53(2):463-78. doi: 10.1016/j.ympev.2009.06.021.
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