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Papilio demoleus

Papilio demoleus is a common and widespread swallowtail butterfly. The butterfly is also known as the lime butterfly,[1][2] lemon butterfly, lime swallowtail, and chequered swallowtail.[2] These common names refer to their host plants, which are usually citrus species such as the cultivated lime. Unlike most swallowtail butterflies, it does not have a prominent tail. When the adult stage is taken into consideration, the lime swallowtail is the shortest-lived butterfly, with male adults dying after four days and females after a week.[3] The butterfly is native to Asia and Australia, and can be considered an invasive pest in other parts of the world.[1][2] The butterfly has spread to Hispaniola island (Dominican Republic) in the Western Hemisphere,[4] and to Mahé, Seychelles.[5]

Papilio demoleus
underside
Dorsal view
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Family: Papilionidae
Genus: Papilio
Species:
P. demoleus
Binomial name
Papilio demoleus

Description edit

The butterfly is tailless and has a wingspan 80–100 mm.[6]: 52  Above, the background colour is black. A broad, irregular yellow band is found on the wings above, which is broken in the case of the forewing. Besides this, the butterfly has a large number of irregular spots on the wing. The upper hindwing has a red tornal spot with blue edging around it.

As the caterpillar ages, its hunger for leaf tissue continues to grow.[7]

Detailed description as given by Charles Thomas Bingham in 1905:

"Upper side of wings has the ground colour black. The fore wing has the base below cell and basal half of latter so irrorated with yellow scales as to form more or less complete transverse dotted lines, two outwardly oblique yellow spots in cell and a curved spot at its upper apex; a spot at base and another beyond it in interspace 8; a discal transverse series of cream-yellow spots irregular in arrangement and size extends from interspace la to 8; the series interrupted in interspace 5 and the spot in interspace 7 double; this is followed by a sinuous postdiscal series of spots and an admarginal terminal series of smaller spots. In many specimens between the discal and postdiscal series the black ground-colour is irrorated with yellowish scales. Hind wing: base and an edging that decreases in width along the dorsal margin irrorated with yellow scales; followed by a broad medial yellow irregular band, a sinuous postdiscal series of outwardly emarginate yellow spots and a terminal series of smaller similarly coloured spots as on the fore wing. The inner margin of the medial band is curved inwards, the outer margin is very irregular and uneven; in the cell the band does not reach the apex, but beyond the cell there are one or more cream-yellow spots, and the black groundcolour is irrorated with yellowish scales; finally at the tornal angle there is an oval ochraceous-red spot emarginate on its inner side in the female and in both sexes surmounted by a blue lunule; while in interspace 7 between the medial band and the postdiscal spot there is a large ocellus-like spot of the black ground-colour more or less irrorated with blue scales."[8]

"The underside has the ground-colour similar, the cream-coloured markings paler and conspicuously larger. The markings differ from those on the upperside in that the forewing has the basal half of cell and base of wing below it with cream-coloured streaks that coalesce at base; irregular ochraceous spots in interspaces 5 to 8 and the discal series of spots complete not interrupted in interspace 5. On the underside of the hind wing, the black at base of wing and along the dorsal margin centred largely with pale cream-colour; the ocellus in interspace 7, the apex of the cell and the black groundcolour between the medial band and postdiscal markings in interspaces 2–6 centred with ochraceous, margined with blue.[8]

Antennae dark reddish brown, touched with ochraceous on the innerside towards the club; head, thorax and abdomen dusky black, the head and thorax anteriorly streaked with cream-vellow: beneath: the palpi, thorax and abdomen cream-yellow with lateral longitudinal black lines on the last."[8][9]

Status, range, and habitat edit

P. demoleus is perhaps the most widely distributed swallowtail in the world. The butterfly can be found in:[10][11]

Syria, Iraq, Oman, United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, Qatar, Iran, western and possibly eastern Afghanistan, the South Asian Subcontinent (India including the Andamans, Bangladesh, western Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Nepal), Myanmar, Thailand, the Philippines, Cambodia, Vietnam, southern China (including Hainan, Guangdong province), Taiwan, Japan (rare strays), Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia (Kalimantan, Sumatra, Sula, Talaud, Flores, Alor and Sumba), Papua New Guinea, Australia (including Lord Howe Island), Solomon Islands, Hawaii, and possibly other Pacific Ocean islands.

The Southeast Asian subspecies Papilio demoleus malayanus recently established an abundant non-native population on Mahé in Seychelles[5] This species was probably accidentally introduced to Mahé a few years ago (first records in November 2016). Further dispersal events of Papilio demoleus within Seychelles to other granitic islands of the archipelago, e.g. Praslin and La Digue, are expected.[5]

Formerly absent from Borneo, it is now one of the commonest papilionids in Sabah and Sarawak in Malaysian Borneo, Kalimantan (Indonesian Borneo), and Brunei.[5][11]

In recent years, the butterfly has spread to Hispaniola island (Dominican Republic) in the Western Hemisphere,[4] and subsequently to Jamaica,[12] and Puerto Rico.[13] The Dominican population originated from Southeast Asia but how the butterfly reached there is not known.[14]

The widespread range of P. demoleus indicates the butterfly's tolerance and adaptation to diverse habitats. It is found in savannahs, fallow lands, gardens, evergreen and semi-evergreen forests, and shows a preference for streams and riverbeds.[15] In India, it is mostly found in the plains, but can be found on the hills of peninsular India and up to 7,000 feet (2,100 m) in the Himalayas. It is common in urban gardens and may also be encountered in wooded country.[7] The butterfly is also a very successful invader, its spread appearing to be due to its strong flight, increase in urbanisation and agricultural land use that opens up new areas for dispersal, and greater availability of food plants.[12][16]

Taxonomy edit

Five related butterflies form the group of lime butterflies in the genus Papilio of which P. demoleus Linnaeus, 1758 is the flagship species, which gives the name to the group. The other morphologically related butterflies are:[17]

The citrus swallowtail (P. demodocus Esper) is found in sub-Saharan Africa, while the other three species are endemic to Madagascar.[17]

Research into the biogeography, phylogeny, and analysis of vicariance relationships dating back to the Cretaceous, of the "lime butterfly" or "demoleus" group, suggest that the group of lime swallowtails diversified in Madagascar in the middle Miocene.[17]

Six subspecies are recognised in P. demoleus:[12][17]

  • P. d. demoleus Linnaeus, 1758 — Across Asia from China to the Arabian peninsula, and now colonized Turkey, Iraq, Syria, the Philippines, the Talaud and Sula islands, and the Moluccas (Ambon and Ceram)[5]
  • P. d. libanius Fruhstorfer, 1908 — Taiwan, Philippines, Sula, Talaud
  • P. d. malayanus Wallace, 1865 — Sumatra and the Malaysian peninsula, and now expanded its range to Southern Europe (one record in Portugal), Greater Sunda Islands (Sumatra, Java, Borneo, and Bali), Wallacea (Sulawesi, Sumbawa, Lombok, Timor, Leti, Flores, Wetar, and Alor), New Guinea, Bismarck Archipelago, Christmas Island, Torres Strait Islands (Dauan Island), Greater Antilles Islands (Hispaniola, Jamaica, Puerto Rico, Cuba, and Nueva Gerona), and Seychelles (Mahé)[5]
  • P. d. novoguineensis Rothschild, 1908 — the southeastern edge of Papua New Guinea around Port Moresby
  • P. d. sthenelus Macleay, 1826 — Australia
  • P. d. stenelinus Rothschild, 1895 — Sumba, Flores, and Alor

Behavior edit

 
Lime butterflies mud-puddling with common emigrants (Catopsilia pomona) in India

This butterfly is an avid mud-puddler and visitor of flowers. It basks with its wings held wide open on tufts of grass and herbs, and generally keeps within a metre of the ground, even on cloudy days. It relies on its quick flight for escape.[15] It has a number of modes of flight. In the cool of the morning, the flight is slow considering that it is an edible and unprotected swallowtail. As the day progresses, it flies fast, straight, and low. In the hotter part of the day, it may be found settling on damp patches, where it will remain motionless, except for an occasional flutter of wings, if not disturbed.[15] It is also a frequent visitor of flowers in gardens, where it shows a preference for flowers of smaller herbs rather than larger plants such as the ubiquitous Lantana with its plentiful blooms. It can be found swarming in the groves of its food plants.[15]

Research on freshly emerged imagines of P. demoleus showed that they have an inborn or spontaneous preference while feeding for blue and purple colours, while the yellow, yellowish-green, green, and blue-green colours are completely neglected.[18]

Lifecycle edit

 
Lifecycle of common lime butterfly (P. demoleus)

The number of generations of P. demoleus is dependent upon temperature[13] – near the equator, nine generations have been recorded,[12] while in warm temperate China, five generations have been recorded.[13] In the ideal conditions of a laboratory, a generation has been recorded to take place in just over 30 days.[13] The typical time for one generation of P. demoleus to mature in the field ranges from 26 to 59 days.[12] In cold climates, the lime butterfly is known to pass the winter as pupae.[12] Typically, the butterfly undergoes five instars as a caterpillar.[12]

The female butterfly goes from plant to plant, laying a single egg at a time on top of a leaf, which it holds onto with its legs, and flies off as soon as the egg is laid. The egg is round, light yellowish in colour, flattened at the base, smooth-surfaced, and about 1.5 mm in height.[12][15][19] Fertile eggs develop a small red mark at the apex.[20]

The newly hatched caterpillar stays in the middle of the upperside of the leaf. The first instar of the caterpillar is black, with a black head and two rows of subdorsal fleshy spines. The second, third, and fourth instars are dark, with a glossy, dark-brown head, and white markings on the eighth and ninth segments of the caterpillar, which resemble a white patch of uric acid deposited in a bird's droppings, helping them escape predation while remaining in moderately open places.[12][15]

As the instars progress, this resemblance is lost. From the fifth instar onwards, the caterpillars now turn cylindrical in shape, tapered towards the rear, and uniformly pale green in colour with a white subspiracular band. An additional black band is developed on the fourth and fifth segments with two black and two bluish spots on them. The eighth and ninth segments, which earlier provided the camouflage markings now develop a brown and white band. At this stage, the caterpillars are forced to inhabit secluded places.[12][15]

The pupa, which is rugose (wrinkled), stout, and 30 mm in length, has two projections to the front on its head and also one on its thorax, and resembles that of the common Mormon (Papilio polytes), the difference being that the common Mormon pupa has a deeper cut between the projections and its abdomen is more protruded on the sides, having a small point.[12][15]

The pupa is dimorphic with regards to colour, with the colour developing according to the prevalent colour and texture in the background. The green morph, which is found amongst green vegetation and smoother textures, is light green and unmarked or with yellow dorsal markings. When situated among brown or dry objects, the pupa tend to turn light grey brown to pink brown and develop cryptic dark brown and black striation.[12][15][21]

The adults fly in every month, but are particularly abundant during and after the monsoons.[12]

Captive breeding of P. demoleus in Riyadh has revealed these data about the lifespan of various stages at that locality:[22]

  • Number of generations per year: 8
  • Duration of egg stage: 3.1 to 6.1 days
  • Duration of larva stage: 12.9 and 22.7 days
  • Duration of pupa stage: 8.0 to 22.4 days
  • Duration of adult stage: 4 to 6 days with average of 5.1 days

Parasitism and predation edit

 
Cocoons of a parasitoid wasp (Apanteles species), next to a perforated P. demoleus caterpillar

Despite their two-stage camouflage scheme, some caterpillars of P. demoleus are found by parasitic wasps, which lay dozens of eggs in them. The parasitic wasp larvae eat the caterpillar from the inside. Initially, the vital organs are avoided, but by the time the caterpillar is ready to pupate, even the vital organs are consumed. Shortly before, or soon after the caterpillar pupates, the parasitoids emerge from their host, thus killing it.[15]

In Saudi Arabia, the highest mortality rate was found to be in larvae and pupae in cultivated populations due to a bacterium of the genus Bacillus. In addition, eggs and larvae were heavily preyed upon by two unidentified species of spiders which were abundant on citrus trees.[22]

In China, species of fungi in the genus Ophiocordyceps are known to parasitize many kinds of caterpillars, including P. demoleus.[citation needed] The spores were spread out on the parents, and infect the young caterpillar, then when the caterpillars become pupae, they will fail to develop into adults; instead, the fungi kill and eat the caterpillar flesh from within, and grow a spore bud out of the dead caterpillar corpse. The fungi known as dōng chóng xià cǎo are thought to have medicinal properties in China, and are known in English as caterpillar fungus.

In India, these braconid wasp parasitoids are known to parasitize P. demoleus larvae:[12]

In Thailand, a number of organisms have been recorded attacking immature stages of P. demoleus:[12]

In Jamaica, an encyrtid egg parasitoid and a chalcidoid parasitoid have been reported.[12]

Food plants edit

 
Key lime, a species of the cultivated lime, the principal food plant of P. demoleus

The larval food plants of P. demoleus in Asia are from the family Rutaceae, while in Australia and Papua New Guinea, the butterfly also feeds on host plants of family Fabaceae.[12]

Family Rutaceae edit

Family Rhamnaceae edit

Family Fabaceae edit

They have been observed on:

  • Many species of Cullen: Cullen australasicum, C. badocanum, C. balsamicum, C. cinereum, C. patens (spreading scurf-pea, native verbine), C. pustulatum, and C. tenax (tough scurf-pea, emu-foot, emu grass), and C. leucanthum.[12]
  • Psoralea pinnata (fountain bush)[12]

Economic significance edit

 
Caterpillars devouring lemon leaves

The lime butterfly is an economic pest on many cultivated citrus species in India, Pakistan, Iraq, and the Middle East. Due to its history of successful dispersal and range extension, the lime butterfly is likely to spread from its original point of introduction in Hispaniola in the Caribbean to neighbouring Florida, Central America, and South America. Due to its capability for rapid population growth under favourable circumstances and its having been recorded to have five generations in a year in temperate regions of China, it is considered a serious potential threat.[13] The caterpillars can completely defoliate young citrus trees (below 2 feet) and devastate citrus nurseries. In mature trees, caterpillars may prefer young leaves and leaf flush.[12]

Hand-picking of caterpillars and spraying with endosulfan 35 EC (2 ml/10 litres of water) were the recommended means of pest control by Indian government agencies and agricultural colleges,[24] however, endosulfan has since been banned by the Supreme Court of India.[25][26]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Varshney, R.K.; Smetacek, Peter (2015). A Synoptic Catalogue of the Butterflies of India. New Delhi: Butterfly Research Centre, Bhimtal & Indinov Publishing, New Delhi. p. 5. doi:10.13140/RG.2.1.3966.2164. ISBN 978-81-929826-4-9.
  2. ^ a b c Savela, Markku. "Papilio demoleus Linnaeus, 1758". Lepidoptera and Some Other Life Forms. Retrieved 3 July 2018.
  3. ^ "Lifecycle of the citrus butterfly=19 November 2022". researchgate.
  4. ^ a b Guerrero, Kelvin A.; Veloz, Denia; Boyce, Sarah Lyn; Farrell, Brian D. (2004). "First New World Documentation of an Old World Citrus Pest, the Lime Swallowtail Papilio demoleus (Lepidoptera: Papilionidae), in the Dominican Republic (Hispaniola)". American Entomologist. Entomological Society of America. 50 (4): 227–229. doi:10.1093/ae/50.4.227.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Kolosova, Yulia; Bolotov, Ivan (2020). "Recent invasion of the Lime Swallowtail Papilio demoleus (Lepidoptera: Papilionidae) to Seychelles". Ecologica Montenegrina. 28: 31–39. doi:10.37828/em.2020.28.7.
  6. ^ Evans, W.H. (1932). Identification of Indian Butterflies (Free full text download (first edition)) (2 ed.). Mumbai: Bombay Natural History Society. pp. 454 (with 32 plates). Retrieved 14 November 2010.
  7. ^ a b Wynter-Blyth, M.A. (1957). Butterflies of the Indian Region (Reprint of 2009 by Today & Tomorrow's Publishers, New Delhi ed.). Mumbai, India: Bombay Natural History Society. p. 395. ISBN 978-81-7019-232-9. Retrieved 22 October 2010.
  8. ^ a b c   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain: Bingham, C.T. (1907). The Fauna of British India, Including Ceylon and Burma. Vol. II (1st ed.). London: Taylor and Francis, Ltd. pp. 39–40.
  9. ^ Moore, Frederic (1901–1903). Lepidoptera Indica. Vol. V. Vol. 5. London: Lovell Reeve and Co. pp. 234–240.
  10. ^ Collins, N. Mark; Morris, Michael G. (1985). Threatened Swallowtail Butterflies of the World: The IUCN Red Data Book. Gland & Cambridge: IUCN. ISBN 978-2-88032-603-6 – via Biodiversity Heritage Library.
  11. ^ a b Morgun, Dimitry V.; Wiemers, Martin (2012). "First record of the Lime Swallowtail Papilio demoleus Linnaeus, 1758 (Lepidoptera, Papilionidae) in Europe". The Journal of Research on the Lepidoptera. The Lepidoptera Research Foundation. 45: 85–89. Retrieved 24 June 2018.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Lewis, Delano S. (January 2009). "Lime Swallowtail, Chequered Swallowtail, Citrus Swallowtail Papilio demoleus Linnaeus (Insecta: Lipidoptera: Papilionidae)" (PDF). University of Florida (IFAS Extension). Retrieved 26 November 2010.
  13. ^ a b c d e Homziak, Nicholas T.; Homziak, Jurij (2006). "Papilio demoleus (Lepidoptera: Papilionidae): A new record for the United States, Commonwealth of Puerto Rico" (full free download). Florida Entomologist. 89 (4): 485–488. doi:10.1653/0015-4040(2006)89[485:PDLPAN]2.0.CO;2. Retrieved 11 November 2010.
  14. ^ Eastwood, Rod; Boyce, Sarah Lyn; Farrell, Brian D. (2006). "The Provenance of Old World Swallowtail Butterflies, Papilio demoleus (Lepidoptera: Papilionidae), Recently Discovered in the New World". Annals of the Entomological Society of America (abstract). Entomological Society of America. 99 (1): 164–168. doi:10.1603/0013-8746(2006)099[0164:tpoows]2.0.co;2.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Kunte, Krushnamegh (2000). Butterflies of Peninsular India. India, a lifescape (reprint 2006 ed.). Hyderabad: Universities Press (India) Ltd. p. 254. ISBN 978-81-7371-354-5. Retrieved 27 November 2010.
  16. ^ Heppner, John B. (8 December 2006). . Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services Division of Plant Industries. Archived from the original on 2 December 2010. Retrieved 27 November 2010.
  17. ^ a b c d Zakharov, E. V.; Smith, C. R.; Lees, D. C.; Cameron, A.; Vane-Wright, R. I.; Sperling, F. A. H. (2004). "Independent gene phylogenies and morphology demonstrate a Malagasy origin for a wide-ranging group of swallowtail butterflies". Evolution. 58 (12): 2763–2782. doi:10.1111/j.0014-3820.2004.tb01628.x. PMID 15696754. S2CID 24947676.
  18. ^ Ilse, Dora; Vaidya, Vidyadhar G. (1955). "Spontaneous feeding response to colours in Papilio demoleus L". Proceedings of the Indian Academy of Sciences, Section B (abstract). 43 (1): 23–31. doi:10.1007/BF03050215. S2CID 82455044.
  19. ^ a b O, Akhtar. "Insect pests". Plant diseases identification. Retrieved 29 May 2020.
  20. ^ Grund, R. (9 December 1999). "Papilio demoleus sthenelus W.S. Macleay (Chequered Swallowtail)". South Australian Butterflies. Retrieved 23 August 2010.
  21. ^ Smith, A. G. (1978). "Environmental Factors Influencing Pupal Colour Determination in Lepidoptera. I. Experiments with Papilio polytes, Papilio demoleus and Papilio polyxenes". Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological Sciences (abstract). 200 (1140): 295–329. Bibcode:1978RSPSB.200..295S. doi:10.1098/rspb.1978.0021. JSTOR 77392. S2CID 84365809.
  22. ^ a b Badawi, Ali (1981). "Studies on some aspects of the biology and ecology of the citrus butterfly Papilio demoleus L. in Saudi Arabia (Papilionidae, Lepidoptera)". Zeitschrift für Angewandte Entomologie (Abstract). Blackwell Publishing Ltd. 91 (1–5): 286–292. doi:10.1111/j.1439-0418.1981.tb04481.x.
  23. ^ a b c d e f Wynter-Blyth, M.A. (1957) pg 500.
  24. ^ Unattributed (2008). "Acid Lime (Citrus aurantifolia (Christm) Swingle)". TNAU Agritech Portal – Horticulture:Fruit Crops:Acid Lime. Tamil Nadu Agricultural University. from the original on 19 October 2011. Retrieved 20 March 2012. .
  25. ^ "Supreme Court bans Endosulfan for eight weeks – Economic Times". Articles.economictimes.indiatimes.com. 13 May 2011. from the original on 14 January 2015. Retrieved 20 March 2012.
  26. ^ . The Times of India. 5 August 2011. Archived from the original on 22 September 2013. Retrieved 20 March 2012.

Further reading edit

  • Chattopadhyay, Jagannath. (2007), "Swallowtail Butterflies, Biology and Ecology of a Few Indian Species". Desh Prakashan, Kolkata, West Bengal, India. ISBN 978-81-905719-1-3.
  • F. Martin Brown and Bernard Heineman, Jamaica and its Butterflies (E. W. Classey, London 1972), plate VIII

External links edit

  • Life cycle of Lime Butterfly https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MkV3qxISznY
  • Host plant database, NHM UK
  • line swallowtail on the UF / IFAS Featured Creatures Web site
  • Inayoshi, Y. (30 January 2010). "Papilio demoleus malayanus Wallace, 1865". A Check List of Butterflies in Indo-China:Chiefly from Thailand, Laos and Vietnam.

papilio, demoleus, common, lime, redirects, here, common, lime, tree, tilia, europaea, common, widespread, swallowtail, butterfly, butterfly, also, known, lime, butterfly, lemon, butterfly, lime, swallowtail, chequered, swallowtail, these, common, names, refer. Common lime redirects here For the common lime tree see Tilia europaea Papilio demoleus is a common and widespread swallowtail butterfly The butterfly is also known as the lime butterfly 1 2 lemon butterfly lime swallowtail and chequered swallowtail 2 These common names refer to their host plants which are usually citrus species such as the cultivated lime Unlike most swallowtail butterflies it does not have a prominent tail When the adult stage is taken into consideration the lime swallowtail is the shortest lived butterfly with male adults dying after four days and females after a week 3 The butterfly is native to Asia and Australia and can be considered an invasive pest in other parts of the world 1 2 The butterfly has spread to Hispaniola island Dominican Republic in the Western Hemisphere 4 and to Mahe Seychelles 5 Papilio demoleusundersideDorsal viewScientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ArthropodaClass InsectaOrder LepidopteraFamily PapilionidaeGenus PapilioSpecies P demoleusBinomial namePapilio demoleusLinnaeus 1758 Contents 1 Description 2 Status range and habitat 3 Taxonomy 4 Behavior 5 Lifecycle 5 1 Parasitism and predation 6 Food plants 6 1 Family Rutaceae 6 2 Family Rhamnaceae 6 3 Family Fabaceae 7 Economic significance 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksDescription editThe butterfly is tailless and has a wingspan 80 100 mm 6 52 Above the background colour is black A broad irregular yellow band is found on the wings above which is broken in the case of the forewing Besides this the butterfly has a large number of irregular spots on the wing The upper hindwing has a red tornal spot with blue edging around it As the caterpillar ages its hunger for leaf tissue continues to grow 7 Detailed description as given by Charles Thomas Bingham in 1905 Upper side of wings has the ground colour black The fore wing has the base below cell and basal half of latter so irrorated with yellow scales as to form more or less complete transverse dotted lines two outwardly oblique yellow spots in cell and a curved spot at its upper apex a spot at base and another beyond it in interspace 8 a discal transverse series of cream yellow spots irregular in arrangement and size extends from interspace la to 8 the series interrupted in interspace 5 and the spot in interspace 7 double this is followed by a sinuous postdiscal series of spots and an admarginal terminal series of smaller spots In many specimens between the discal and postdiscal series the black ground colour is irrorated with yellowish scales Hind wing base and an edging that decreases in width along the dorsal margin irrorated with yellow scales followed by a broad medial yellow irregular band a sinuous postdiscal series of outwardly emarginate yellow spots and a terminal series of smaller similarly coloured spots as on the fore wing The inner margin of the medial band is curved inwards the outer margin is very irregular and uneven in the cell the band does not reach the apex but beyond the cell there are one or more cream yellow spots and the black groundcolour is irrorated with yellowish scales finally at the tornal angle there is an oval ochraceous red spot emarginate on its inner side in the female and in both sexes surmounted by a blue lunule while in interspace 7 between the medial band and the postdiscal spot there is a large ocellus like spot of the black ground colour more or less irrorated with blue scales 8 The underside has the ground colour similar the cream coloured markings paler and conspicuously larger The markings differ from those on the upperside in that the forewing has the basal half of cell and base of wing below it with cream coloured streaks that coalesce at base irregular ochraceous spots in interspaces 5 to 8 and the discal series of spots complete not interrupted in interspace 5 On the underside of the hind wing the black at base of wing and along the dorsal margin centred largely with pale cream colour the ocellus in interspace 7 the apex of the cell and the black groundcolour between the medial band and postdiscal markings in interspaces 2 6 centred with ochraceous margined with blue 8 Antennae dark reddish brown touched with ochraceous on the innerside towards the club head thorax and abdomen dusky black the head and thorax anteriorly streaked with cream vellow beneath the palpi thorax and abdomen cream yellow with lateral longitudinal black lines on the last 8 9 nbsp Collecting nectar from chinarose at ABS Academy Campus Durgapur West Bengal India nbsp The red tornal spot with blue edging nbsp An older adult with orange spots nbsp Mating nbsp P d stenelinusRinca Indonesia nbsp P d malayanusSingapore nbsp Papilio demoleus at Kasaragod Kerala IndiaStatus range and habitat editP demoleus is perhaps the most widely distributed swallowtail in the world The butterfly can be found in 10 11 Syria Iraq Oman United Arab Emirates Kuwait Qatar Iran western and possibly eastern Afghanistan the South Asian Subcontinent India including the Andamans Bangladesh western Pakistan Sri Lanka Nepal Myanmar Thailand the Philippines Cambodia Vietnam southern China including Hainan Guangdong province Taiwan Japan rare strays Malaysia Singapore Indonesia Kalimantan Sumatra Sula Talaud Flores Alor and Sumba Papua New Guinea Australia including Lord Howe Island Solomon Islands Hawaii and possibly other Pacific Ocean islands The Southeast Asian subspecies Papilio demoleus malayanus recently established an abundant non native population on Mahe in Seychelles 5 This species was probably accidentally introduced to Mahe a few years ago first records in November 2016 Further dispersal events of Papilio demoleus within Seychelles to other granitic islands of the archipelago e g Praslin and La Digue are expected 5 Formerly absent from Borneo it is now one of the commonest papilionids in Sabah and Sarawak in Malaysian Borneo Kalimantan Indonesian Borneo and Brunei 5 11 In recent years the butterfly has spread to Hispaniola island Dominican Republic in the Western Hemisphere 4 and subsequently to Jamaica 12 and Puerto Rico 13 The Dominican population originated from Southeast Asia but how the butterfly reached there is not known 14 The widespread range of P demoleus indicates the butterfly s tolerance and adaptation to diverse habitats It is found in savannahs fallow lands gardens evergreen and semi evergreen forests and shows a preference for streams and riverbeds 15 In India it is mostly found in the plains but can be found on the hills of peninsular India and up to 7 000 feet 2 100 m in the Himalayas It is common in urban gardens and may also be encountered in wooded country 7 The butterfly is also a very successful invader its spread appearing to be due to its strong flight increase in urbanisation and agricultural land use that opens up new areas for dispersal and greater availability of food plants 12 16 Taxonomy editFive related butterflies form the group of lime butterflies in the genus Papilio of which P demoleus Linnaeus 1758 is the flagship species which gives the name to the group The other morphologically related butterflies are 17 Papilio demodocus Esper 1798 Papilio erithonioides Grose Smith 1891 Papilio grosesmithi Rothschild 1926 Papilio morondavana Grose Smith 1891The citrus swallowtail P demodocus Esper is found in sub Saharan Africa while the other three species are endemic to Madagascar 17 nbsp Common lime butterfly P demoleus nbsp Citrus swallowtail P demodocus nbsp Madagascan emperor swallowtail Papilio morondavanaResearch into the biogeography phylogeny and analysis of vicariance relationships dating back to the Cretaceous of the lime butterfly or demoleus group suggest that the group of lime swallowtails diversified in Madagascar in the middle Miocene 17 Six subspecies are recognised in P demoleus 12 17 P d demoleus Linnaeus 1758 Across Asia from China to the Arabian peninsula and now colonized Turkey Iraq Syria the Philippines the Talaud and Sula islands and the Moluccas Ambon and Ceram 5 P d libanius Fruhstorfer 1908 Taiwan Philippines Sula Talaud P d malayanus Wallace 1865 Sumatra and the Malaysian peninsula and now expanded its range to Southern Europe one record in Portugal Greater Sunda Islands Sumatra Java Borneo and Bali Wallacea Sulawesi Sumbawa Lombok Timor Leti Flores Wetar and Alor New Guinea Bismarck Archipelago Christmas Island Torres Strait Islands Dauan Island Greater Antilles Islands Hispaniola Jamaica Puerto Rico Cuba and Nueva Gerona and Seychelles Mahe 5 P d novoguineensis Rothschild 1908 the southeastern edge of Papua New Guinea around Port Moresby P d sthenelus Macleay 1826 Australia P d stenelinus Rothschild 1895 Sumba Flores and AlorBehavior edit nbsp Lime butterflies mud puddling with common emigrants Catopsilia pomona in IndiaThis butterfly is an avid mud puddler and visitor of flowers It basks with its wings held wide open on tufts of grass and herbs and generally keeps within a metre of the ground even on cloudy days It relies on its quick flight for escape 15 It has a number of modes of flight In the cool of the morning the flight is slow considering that it is an edible and unprotected swallowtail As the day progresses it flies fast straight and low In the hotter part of the day it may be found settling on damp patches where it will remain motionless except for an occasional flutter of wings if not disturbed 15 It is also a frequent visitor of flowers in gardens where it shows a preference for flowers of smaller herbs rather than larger plants such as the ubiquitous Lantana with its plentiful blooms It can be found swarming in the groves of its food plants 15 Research on freshly emerged imagines of P demoleus showed that they have an inborn or spontaneous preference while feeding for blue and purple colours while the yellow yellowish green green and blue green colours are completely neglected 18 nbsp P demoleus basking nbsp While resting the butterfly closes its wing over its back and draws the forewings between the hindwings 15 nbsp Lime butterflies mating in Narsapur Medak district India nbsp Lime butterfly on a leaf during excretingLifecycle edit nbsp Lifecycle of common lime butterfly P demoleus The number of generations of P demoleus is dependent upon temperature 13 near the equator nine generations have been recorded 12 while in warm temperate China five generations have been recorded 13 In the ideal conditions of a laboratory a generation has been recorded to take place in just over 30 days 13 The typical time for one generation of P demoleus to mature in the field ranges from 26 to 59 days 12 In cold climates the lime butterfly is known to pass the winter as pupae 12 Typically the butterfly undergoes five instars as a caterpillar 12 The female butterfly goes from plant to plant laying a single egg at a time on top of a leaf which it holds onto with its legs and flies off as soon as the egg is laid The egg is round light yellowish in colour flattened at the base smooth surfaced and about 1 5 mm in height 12 15 19 Fertile eggs develop a small red mark at the apex 20 The newly hatched caterpillar stays in the middle of the upperside of the leaf The first instar of the caterpillar is black with a black head and two rows of subdorsal fleshy spines The second third and fourth instars are dark with a glossy dark brown head and white markings on the eighth and ninth segments of the caterpillar which resemble a white patch of uric acid deposited in a bird s droppings helping them escape predation while remaining in moderately open places 12 15 As the instars progress this resemblance is lost From the fifth instar onwards the caterpillars now turn cylindrical in shape tapered towards the rear and uniformly pale green in colour with a white subspiracular band An additional black band is developed on the fourth and fifth segments with two black and two bluish spots on them The eighth and ninth segments which earlier provided the camouflage markings now develop a brown and white band At this stage the caterpillars are forced to inhabit secluded places 12 15 The pupa which is rugose wrinkled stout and 30 mm in length has two projections to the front on its head and also one on its thorax and resembles that of the common Mormon Papilio polytes the difference being that the common Mormon pupa has a deeper cut between the projections and its abdomen is more protruded on the sides having a small point 12 15 The pupa is dimorphic with regards to colour with the colour developing according to the prevalent colour and texture in the background The green morph which is found amongst green vegetation and smoother textures is light green and unmarked or with yellow dorsal markings When situated among brown or dry objects the pupa tend to turn light grey brown to pink brown and develop cryptic dark brown and black striation 12 15 21 The adults fly in every month but are particularly abundant during and after the monsoons 12 Captive breeding of P demoleus in Riyadh has revealed these data about the lifespan of various stages at that locality 22 Number of generations per year 8 Duration of egg stage 3 1 to 6 1 days Duration of larva stage 12 9 and 22 7 days Duration of pupa stage 8 0 to 22 4 days Duration of adult stage 4 to 6 days with average of 5 1 days nbsp Early instar birds dropping caterpillar nbsp early fifth instar caterpillar nbsp late fifth instar caterpillar nbsp Pupa in rearing cageParasitism and predation edit nbsp Cocoons of a parasitoid wasp Apanteles species next to a perforated P demoleus caterpillarDespite their two stage camouflage scheme some caterpillars of P demoleus are found by parasitic wasps which lay dozens of eggs in them The parasitic wasp larvae eat the caterpillar from the inside Initially the vital organs are avoided but by the time the caterpillar is ready to pupate even the vital organs are consumed Shortly before or soon after the caterpillar pupates the parasitoids emerge from their host thus killing it 15 In Saudi Arabia the highest mortality rate was found to be in larvae and pupae in cultivated populations due to a bacterium of the genus Bacillus In addition eggs and larvae were heavily preyed upon by two unidentified species of spiders which were abundant on citrus trees 22 In China species of fungi in the genus Ophiocordyceps are known to parasitize many kinds of caterpillars including P demoleus citation needed The spores were spread out on the parents and infect the young caterpillar then when the caterpillars become pupae they will fail to develop into adults instead the fungi kill and eat the caterpillar flesh from within and grow a spore bud out of the dead caterpillar corpse The fungi known as dōng chong xia cǎo are thought to have medicinal properties in China and are known in English as caterpillar fungus In India these braconid wasp parasitoids are known to parasitize P demoleus larvae 12 Apanteles species including Apanteles papilionis Habrobracon hebetorIn Thailand a number of organisms have been recorded attacking immature stages of P demoleus 12 Egg parasites Ooencyrtus malayensis Ferriere Hymenoptera Encyrtidae Tetrastichus sp Hymenoptera Eulophidae Larval stage Erycia nymphalidophaga Baronoff Diptera Tachinidae parasite Cantheconidea furcellata Wolff Pentatomidae predator Other natural enemies of larvae included reduviid bugs birds spiders sphecid wasps and chameleons Pupal parasites Brachymeria sp Hymenoptera Chalcididae Pteromalus puparum Linnaeus Hymenoptera Pteromalidae OphiocordycepsIn Jamaica an encyrtid egg parasitoid and a chalcidoid parasitoid have been reported 12 Food plants edit nbsp Key lime a species of the cultivated lime the principal food plant of P demoleusThe larval food plants of P demoleus in Asia are from the family Rutaceae while in Australia and Papua New Guinea the butterfly also feeds on host plants of family Fabaceae 12 Family Rutaceae edit Cultivated lime 23 orange and lemon C aurantifolia 15 C grandis 15 C limon 15 C sinensis 15 Atalanta racemosa 15 Glycosmis pentaphylla 23 Ruta graveolens 23 Bael Aegle marmelos 23 Murraya koenigii curry tree 23 19 Chloroxylon swietenia 23 Acronychia pedunculata Microcitrus australis Australian round lime Australian lime 12 Family Rhamnaceae edit Ber Ziziphus mauritiana Family Fabaceae edit They have been observed on Many species of Cullen Cullen australasicum C badocanum C balsamicum C cinereum C patens spreading scurf pea native verbine C pustulatum and C tenax tough scurf pea emu foot emu grass and C leucanthum 12 Psoralea pinnata fountain bush 12 Economic significance edit nbsp Caterpillars devouring lemon leavesThe lime butterfly is an economic pest on many cultivated citrus species in India Pakistan Iraq and the Middle East Due to its history of successful dispersal and range extension the lime butterfly is likely to spread from its original point of introduction in Hispaniola in the Caribbean to neighbouring Florida Central America and South America Due to its capability for rapid population growth under favourable circumstances and its having been recorded to have five generations in a year in temperate regions of China it is considered a serious potential threat 13 The caterpillars can completely defoliate young citrus trees below 2 feet and devastate citrus nurseries In mature trees caterpillars may prefer young leaves and leaf flush 12 Hand picking of caterpillars and spraying with endosulfan 35 EC 2 ml 10 litres of water were the recommended means of pest control by Indian government agencies and agricultural colleges 24 however endosulfan has since been banned by the Supreme Court of India 25 26 See also editList of butterflies of India Papilionidae List of butterflies of JamaicaReferences edit a b Varshney R K Smetacek Peter 2015 A Synoptic Catalogue of the Butterflies of India New Delhi Butterfly Research Centre Bhimtal amp Indinov Publishing New Delhi p 5 doi 10 13140 RG 2 1 3966 2164 ISBN 978 81 929826 4 9 a b c Savela Markku Papilio demoleus Linnaeus 1758 Lepidoptera and Some Other Life Forms Retrieved 3 July 2018 Lifecycle of the citrus butterfly 19 November 2022 researchgate a b Guerrero Kelvin A Veloz Denia Boyce Sarah Lyn Farrell Brian D 2004 First New World Documentation of an Old World Citrus Pest the Lime Swallowtail Papilio demoleus Lepidoptera Papilionidae in the Dominican Republic Hispaniola American Entomologist Entomological Society of America 50 4 227 229 doi 10 1093 ae 50 4 227 a b c d e f Kolosova Yulia Bolotov Ivan 2020 Recent invasion of the Lime Swallowtail Papilio demoleus Lepidoptera Papilionidae to Seychelles Ecologica Montenegrina 28 31 39 doi 10 37828 em 2020 28 7 Evans W H 1932 Identification of Indian Butterflies Free full text download first edition 2 ed Mumbai Bombay Natural History Society pp 454 with 32 plates Retrieved 14 November 2010 a b Wynter Blyth M A 1957 Butterflies of the Indian Region Reprint of 2009 by Today amp Tomorrow s Publishers New Delhi ed Mumbai India Bombay Natural History Society p 395 ISBN 978 81 7019 232 9 Retrieved 22 October 2010 a b c nbsp One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Bingham C T 1907 The Fauna of British India Including Ceylon and Burma Vol II 1st ed London Taylor and Francis Ltd pp 39 40 Moore Frederic 1901 1903 Lepidoptera Indica Vol V Vol 5 London Lovell Reeve and Co pp 234 240 Collins N Mark Morris Michael G 1985 Threatened Swallowtail Butterflies of the World The IUCN Red Data Book Gland amp Cambridge IUCN ISBN 978 2 88032 603 6 via Biodiversity Heritage Library a b Morgun Dimitry V Wiemers Martin 2012 First record of the Lime Swallowtail Papilio demoleus Linnaeus 1758 Lepidoptera Papilionidae in Europe The Journal of Research on the Lepidoptera The Lepidoptera Research Foundation 45 85 89 Retrieved 24 June 2018 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Lewis Delano S January 2009 Lime Swallowtail Chequered Swallowtail Citrus Swallowtail Papilio demoleus Linnaeus Insecta Lipidoptera Papilionidae PDF University of Florida IFAS Extension Retrieved 26 November 2010 a b c d e Homziak Nicholas T Homziak Jurij 2006 Papilio demoleus Lepidoptera Papilionidae A new record for the United States Commonwealth of Puerto Rico full free download Florida Entomologist 89 4 485 488 doi 10 1653 0015 4040 2006 89 485 PDLPAN 2 0 CO 2 Retrieved 11 November 2010 Eastwood Rod Boyce Sarah Lyn Farrell Brian D 2006 The Provenance of Old World Swallowtail Butterflies Papilio demoleus Lepidoptera Papilionidae Recently Discovered in the New World Annals of the Entomological Society of America abstract Entomological Society of America 99 1 164 168 doi 10 1603 0013 8746 2006 099 0164 tpoows 2 0 co 2 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Kunte Krushnamegh 2000 Butterflies of Peninsular India India a lifescape reprint 2006 ed Hyderabad Universities Press India Ltd p 254 ISBN 978 81 7371 354 5 Retrieved 27 November 2010 Heppner John B 8 December 2006 Pest Alert Lime Swallowtail in the Caribbean and possible impacts for Florida citrus Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services Division of Plant Industries Archived from the original on 2 December 2010 Retrieved 27 November 2010 a b c d Zakharov E V Smith C R Lees D C Cameron A Vane Wright R I Sperling F A H 2004 Independent gene phylogenies and morphology demonstrate a Malagasy origin for a wide ranging group of swallowtail butterflies Evolution 58 12 2763 2782 doi 10 1111 j 0014 3820 2004 tb01628 x PMID 15696754 S2CID 24947676 Ilse Dora Vaidya Vidyadhar G 1955 Spontaneous feeding response to colours in Papilio demoleus L Proceedings of the Indian Academy of Sciences Section B abstract 43 1 23 31 doi 10 1007 BF03050215 S2CID 82455044 a b O Akhtar Insect pests Plant diseases identification Retrieved 29 May 2020 Grund R 9 December 1999 Papilio demoleus sthenelus W S Macleay Chequered Swallowtail South Australian Butterflies Retrieved 23 August 2010 Smith A G 1978 Environmental Factors Influencing Pupal Colour Determination in Lepidoptera I Experiments with Papilio polytes Papilio demoleus and Papilio polyxenes Proceedings of the Royal Society of London Series B Biological Sciences abstract 200 1140 295 329 Bibcode 1978RSPSB 200 295S doi 10 1098 rspb 1978 0021 JSTOR 77392 S2CID 84365809 a b Badawi Ali 1981 Studies on some aspects of the biology and ecology of the citrus butterfly Papilio demoleus L in Saudi Arabia Papilionidae Lepidoptera Zeitschrift fur Angewandte Entomologie Abstract Blackwell Publishing Ltd 91 1 5 286 292 doi 10 1111 j 1439 0418 1981 tb04481 x a b c d e f Wynter Blyth M A 1957 pg 500 Unattributed 2008 Acid Lime Citrus aurantifolia Christm Swingle TNAU Agritech Portal Horticulture Fruit Crops Acid Lime Tamil Nadu Agricultural University Archived from the original on 19 October 2011 Retrieved 20 March 2012 Supreme Court bans Endosulfan for eight weeks Economic Times Articles economictimes indiatimes com 13 May 2011 Archived from the original on 14 January 2015 Retrieved 20 March 2012 Supreme Court refuses to lift ban on endosulfan The Times of India 5 August 2011 Archived from the original on 22 September 2013 Retrieved 20 March 2012 Further reading editChattopadhyay Jagannath 2007 Swallowtail Butterflies Biology and Ecology of a Few Indian Species Desh Prakashan Kolkata West Bengal India ISBN 978 81 905719 1 3 F Martin Brown and Bernard Heineman Jamaica and its Butterflies E W Classey London 1972 plate VIIIExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Papilio demoleus nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Papilio demoleus Life cycle of Lime Butterfly https www youtube com watch v MkV3qxISznY Host plant database NHM UK line swallowtail on the UF IFAS Featured Creatures Web site Inayoshi Y 30 January 2010 Papilio demoleus malayanus Wallace 1865 A Check List of Butterflies in Indo China Chiefly from Thailand Laos and Vietnam Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Papilio demoleus amp oldid 1189199849, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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