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Swallowtail butterfly

Swallowtail butterflies are large, colorful butterflies in the family Papilionidae, and include over 550 species. Though the majority are tropical, members of the family inhabit every continent except Antarctica. The family includes the largest butterflies in the world, the birdwing butterflies of the genus Ornithoptera.[1]

Swallowtail butterfly

Swallowtails have a number of distinctive features; for example, the papilionid caterpillar bears a repugnatorial organ called the osmeterium on its prothorax. The osmeterium normally remains hidden, but when threatened, the larva turns it outward through a transverse dorsal groove by inflating it with fluid.[2]

The forked appearance in some of the swallowtails' hindwings, which can be seen when the butterfly is resting with its wings spread, gave rise to the common name swallowtail. As for its formal name, Linnaeus chose Papilio for the type genus, as papilio is Latin for "butterfly". For the specific epithets of the genus, Linnaeus applied the names of Greek figures to the swallowtails. The type species: Papilio machaon honored Machaon, one of the sons of Asclepius, mentioned in the Iliad.[3] Further, the species Papilio homerus is named after the Greek poet, Homer.[4]

The Mon of the Taira clan of Japan is an Agehachō (swallowtail butterfly).

Taxonomy edit

Subfamilies edit

The genera of extant swallowtails are usually classified into three subfamilies, Baroniinae, Parnassiinae, and Papilioninae, the latter two being further divided into tribes. In swallowtails, besides morphological characteristics, the choice of food plants and ecological lifestyle reflect phylogeny and classification.

Baroniinae edit

The Baroniinae are a monotypic subfamily, restricted to a very small region in Mexico and are considered to be the most basal of the subfamilies. Baronia brevicornis is considered to be a relict species, and shares features with a fossil taxon Pra Papilio. Baronia is unique among papilionidae' as having an Acacia species (family Leguminosae) as its food plant.[5]

Subfamily: Baroniene.

Parnassiinae edit

The Parnassiinae are a subfamily of essentially Holarctic butterflies. The vast majority of species, mostly Parnassius, can be found in mountain habitats. Parnassiinines can also be found in other habitats such as "arid deserts (Hypermnestra), humid forests (Luehdorfia) and even lowland meadows (Zerynthia)".[6] The tribes recognized in the Parnassiinae are Parnassiini, Zerynthiini, and Luehdorfiini.

Tribe Parnassiini contains two genera, Hypermnestra, largely confined to central Asia and the genus Parnassius (the Apollos), a distinctive group of many species, all of which are alpine and capable of living at high altitudes. Most Parnassius have two small reddish spots on their hindwings. The tribe Luehdorfiini contains the genera Archon of Asia minor and the genus Luehdorfia of China and Japan. These two tribes have evolved to change their food plants, while the third tribe, Zerynthiini, has retained the archetypical papilionid food plant, the lowland vine Aristolochia. Zerynthiini comprises four genera – Sericinus, Bhutanitis, Zerynthia and Allancastria.[5]: 13 [7]

Subfamily: Parnassiinae.

Papilioninae edit

The tribes recognized in the Papilioninae are Leptocircini, Teinopalpini, Troidini, and Papilionini.

Subfamily: Papilioninae.

Praepapilioninae edit

An additional subfamily, Praepapilioninae, consisting of a single genus Praepapilio, includes two species of extinct butterflies, each member being described from single fossils found in a middle Eocene deposit in Colorado, United States (Durden and Rose, 1978).[8]

Phylogeny edit

A phylogeny of the Papilionidae based on Nazari (2007) is given:[1][7]

Phylogeny of the Papilionidae
  Papilionidae  

(†) Praepapilioninae

 Baroniinae

  Parnassiinae  
  Papilioninae  

 Leptocircini

 Teinopalpini

after Nazari (2007)[1][7]

It is now accepted that the subfamily Papilioninae is monophyletic.[1] The swallowtail butterflies in the nominate tribe Papilionini number about 225 species and studies have been made on their host plant coevolution and phylogeny. Old morphological classifications were also found to be valid in that they formed clusters. Species belonging to the groups that use Rutaceae as host plants formed two groups corresponding to Old World and American taxa. Those that fed on Lauraceae and Magnoliaceae were found to form another cluster which includes both Asian and American taxa.[9]

The Parnassinae, like the Papilioninae, were also believed to be monophyletic based on morphological studies but recent studies based on both morphological and molecular characteristics suggest that this is not the case.[1] Of the Parnassiinae, the genera Parnassius and Hypermnestra were found to be extremely close based on molecular studies[10] and are now considered to be part of the tribe Parnassiini.[7] The two taxa, Archon and Luehdorfia, have been found to be closely related through analysis of nuclear and mitochondrial DNA, and, though they share no morphological similarities, have now been united in the tribe Luehdorfiini.[7]

The subfamily Baroniinae is represented by the sole representative species Baronia brevicornis. They are unique in the family to use the Fabaceae (Leguminosae) as their larval host plants. The Baronninae and the extinct subfamily Praepapilioninae share many external similarities and are traditionally considered to be the most primitive subfamilies and sister to the rest of the swallowtails. Recent research suggests that this may not be the case, the Baroniinae being closely related to only the Parnassiinae, and Praepapilio to only the Papilionini and neither taxa being sister to the rest of the swallowtails.[1]

Distribution edit

As of 2005, 552 extant species have been identified which are distributed across the tropical and temperate regions.[11] Various species inhabit altitudes ranging from sea level to high mountains, as in the case of most species of Parnassius. The majority of swallowtail species and the greatest diversity are found in the tropics and subtropical regions between 20°N and 20°S,[5] particularly Southeast Asia, and between 20°N and 40°N in East Asia. Only 12 species are found in Europe and only one species, Papilio machaon is found in the British Isles.[12] North America has 40 species, including several tropical species and Parnassius.[13]

The northernmost swallowtail is the Siberian Apollo (Parnassius arcticus), found in the Arctic Circle in northeastern Yakutia, at altitudes of 1500 meters above sea level.[14] In the Himalayas, various Apollo species such as Parnassius epaphus, have been found at altitudes of 6,000 meters above sea level.[15]: 221 

Food edit

 
Scarce swallowtail, lavender, near Adriatic

The caterpillars of various swallowtail butterfly species feed on a wide range of different plants, most depending on only one of five families: Aristolochiaceae, Annonaceae, Lauraceae, Umbelliferae (Apiaceae) and Rutaceae. By eating some of these toxic plants, the caterpillars sequester aristolochic acid which renders both the caterpillars and the butterflies of some of these as toxic, thus protecting them from predators.[16] Similarly, the Parnassius smintheus sequesters sarmentosin from its host plant Sedum lanceolatum for protection from predators.[17] Swallowtail tribes Zerynthiini (Parnassiinae), Luehdorfiini (Parnassiinae) and Troidini (Papilioninae), almost exclusively use the family Aristolochiaceae as their host plants.

For example, the eastern black swallowtail's (Papilio polyxenes) main host plant in the wild is Queen Anne's lace, but they also eat garden plants in the carrot family, including carrots, parsley, dill, and fennel.[18]

Adult swallowtails sip nectar, but also mud and sometimes manure.[19]

Life cycle edit

The detailed descriptions of morphological characteristics of the Papilionidae, as quoted in Bingham (1905) are as follows:[20]: 1, 2 

Egg. "Dome-shaped, smooth or obscurely facetted, not as high as wide, somewhat leathery, opaque." (Doherty.)

Larva. Stout, smooth or with a series of fleshy tubercles on the dorsum: sometimes with a raised fleshy protuberance (the so-called hood or crest) on the fourth segment. The second segment has a transverse opening, out of which the larva protrudes at will and an erect, forked, glandular fleshy organ that emits a strong, penetrating, and somewhat unpleasant odor.

Pupa. Variable in form but most often curved backwards. It is angulate, with the head truncate or rounded and the back of abdomen is smooth or tuberculate. It is attached by the tail, normally in a perpendicular position, and further secured by a silken girth round the middle. In Parnassius, the pupa is placed in a loose silken web between leaves.

Imago. Wings extraordinarily variable in shape. Hindwing very frequently has a tail, which may be slender, or broad and spatulate, but is always an extension of the termen at vein 4. In one genus, Armandia, the termen of the hindwing is prolonged into tails at the apices of veins 2 and 3 as well as at vein 4. Forewing (except in the aberrant genera Parnassius and Hypermnestra) with all 12 veins present and in addition a short internal vein, vein 1 a,[21] that invariably terminates on the dorsal margin.

Stages of development of a papilionid, the giant swallowtail (Papilio cresphontes)

Distinguishing characteristics edit

The key characteristics that differentiate the Papilionidae from the other butterfly families are:[1]

  • The osmeterium is a forked, fleshy eversible organ found in the prothoracic segment of caterpillars.
  • Venation – in swallowtails, the second anal vein, 2A, extends up to the wing margin and does not link with the first anal vein, 1A. These veins are fused in other butterfly families and 2A does not reach the wing margin.
  • The sclerites of the cervix (membranous neck between the head and thorax) are fused beneath the neck where the muscles for head movement are anchored.

Special adaptations and defense edit

Swallowtail butterflies practice Batesian mimicry, a behavior in which the butterflies' appearance closely resemble that of distasteful species that prevents predation. Swallowtails differ from many animals that practice mimicry. The tiger swallowtail butterfly (Papilio glaucus), exhibits a female-limited polymorphism for Batesian mimicry and others, such as the Canadian tiger swallowtail (Papilio canadensis) do not display any form of mimicry.[22]

Predators include the red-winged blackbird, Pennsylvania firefly, five-lined skink, green darner, goldenrod spider, Chinese mantis, fiery searcher, and striped skunk.[18]

Biological basis for polymorphisms in mimicry edit

Not all individuals in some species are identical in appearance. For example, Papilio glaucus (eastern tiger swallowtail), Y-linkage determines whether the females are either wild-type (yellow and black) or melanic (dark melanin replaces the yellow background).[23] This genetic difference stems from the fact that melanism is controlled by a single gene, which controls the level of dopamine in the organism. The enzyme BAS, which assists dopamine in producing the yellow pigmentation, normally found on the wings' background, is suppressed. Without the pigmentation, the butterfly appears mostly black (the melanic form) and is a Batesian mimic of Battus philenor, the pipevine swallowtail. There are also Papilio glaucus that are not wholly black; several possess an intermediate "sooty" color and are sensitive to temperature.[22]

The different polymorphisms (wild-type, melanic, and the 'sooty' intermediate) depend upon the geographical distribution and abundance of its mimic, the Battus philenor, whose wing color varies depending on its geographical location.[22] In order to be successfully confused for the B. philenor by predators, the Papilio glaucus's background wing color matches that of the B. philenor residing in the same regional area. Studies support this theory; in the southeastern United States, the relative abundance of melanic females has been found to geographically correlate with B. philenor.

Mimicry edit

Only certain subsets of swallowtails practice mimicry. Species differ in whether one or both sexes is mimetic, and whether the mimicry is monomorphic or polymorphic. A phenomenon which has received particular attention is female-limited polymorphism, in which only the females of a species are mimetic and polymorphic, often mimicking different, distantly-related aposematic butterflies. This polymorphism is seen in Papilio dardanus, the African swallowtail butterfly, whose females have three different morphs for wing color pattern: a black-and-white pattern for Batesian mimicry, a black-and-yellow pattern that resembles the males of the species, and a pattern with orange patches that resembles the elderly males of the species.[24] Given that the males of the species, which do not have Batesian mimicry, are preyed upon much more frequently by predators than the females, an ongoing question is why females would exhibit the non-mimetic wing pattern, which would seemingly lower their fitness compared to the mimicry form. The pipevine swallowtail exhibits Batesian mimicry as well.

Several hypotheses for this phenomenon were made, the two noteworthy being the pseudosexual selection hypothesis and the male avoidance hypothesis. In the pseudosexual hypothesis, male butterflies aggressively approached the male-looking females and then mellowed their behavior into sexual behavior when they were close enough to identify them as females.[25] In the male avoidance hypothesis, female butterflies disguise themselves in an attempt to evade male harassment, as courtship can be harmful, time-consuming, and attract predators.[26]

One study recorded male responses to females of each morphs and found that the males consistently favored the Batesian mimics, then the black and yellow, and then the morph with orange patches.[24] The scientists concluded that frequency-dependent selection did lead to equal success for all three alternative strategies: the Batesian females suffered the fewest predators but their fitness was reduced the most by sexual harassment, while the other two faced lower sexual harassment but also lost fitness from predators' attacks.

Mating and young edit

After mating, the male Parnassines produce a glue-like substance that is used to seal the female genital opening and prevent other males from mating.[27] They lay individual eggs on the underside of the leaves of their food plants.[19] There is no parental investment once the eggs have been laid.

The pupae are typically attached to the substrate by the cremaster but with head up held by a silk girdle. The Apollos, however, pupate in debris on the ground and also build a loose cocoon. In the temperate regions, the winters are passed in a pupal diapause stage.

In culture edit

Since swallowtail butterflies are large, colorful, and attractive, they have been targeted by butterfly collectors. The largest of these, the birdwing butterflies are particularly sought after and are cultured in butterfly farms to supply collectors.

Many members of the family, as larvae, feed on plants of the citrus family Rutaceae, making some of these attractive butterflies pests in citrus orchards.

The Oregon swallowtail is the state insect of Oregon. The eastern tiger swallowtail is the state insect of Virginia and the state butterfly of Georgia, Delaware, and South Carolina. The black swallowtail is the state butterfly of Oklahoma.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Reed, Robert D.; Sperling, Felix A.H. (2006). "Papilionidae – The Swallowtail Butterflies". [Tree of Life Web Project]. Retrieved 7 November 2010.
  2. ^ Richards, O. W.; Davies, R.G. (1977). Imms' General Textbook of Entomology: Volume 1: Structure, Physiology and Development Volume 2: Classification and Biology. Berlin: Springer. ISBN 0-412-61390-5.
  3. ^ Salmon, Michael A., Marren, Peter, Harley, Basil. The Aurelian Legacy: British Butterflies and Their Collectors. page 252. Publisher: University of California Press. 2001. ISBN 978-0-520-22963-1
  4. ^ Lehnert, Matthew S.; Kramer, Valerie R.; Rawlins, John E.; Verdecia, Vanessa; Daniels, Jaret C. (10 July 2017). "Jamaica's Critically Endangered Butterfly: A Review of the Biology and Conservation Status of the Homerus Swallowtail (Papilio (Pterourus) homerus Fabricius)". Insects. 8 (3): 68. doi:10.3390/insects8030068. PMC 5620688. PMID 28698508.
  5. ^ a b c 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.
  6. ^ Nazari, Vazrick (2006). "Parnassius Latreille 1804". [Tree of Life Web Project]. Retrieved 7 November 2010.
  7. ^ a b c d e Nazari, Vazrick; Sperling, Felix A.H. (2006). "Parnassiinae Duponchel, [1835]". Tree of Life. [Tree of Life Web Project]. Retrieved 7 November 2010.
  8. ^ Durden, C. J.; Rose, H. & Rothschild, Miriam (1978). "Butterflies from the middle Eocene: the earliest occurrence of fossil Papilionidae (Lepidoptera)". Pearce-Sellards Ser. Tex. Mem. Mus. 29 (5): 1–25..
  9. ^ Aubert, J.; Legal, L.; Descimon, H.; Michel, F. (1999). "Molecular phylogeny of swallowtail butterflies of the tribe Papilionini (Papilionidae, Lepidoptera)". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 12 (2): 156–167. doi:10.1006/mpev.1998.0605. PMID 10381318.
  10. ^ Katoh, T.; Chichvarkhin, A.; Yagi, T.; Omoto, K. (2005). "Phylogeny and evolution of butterflies of the genus Parnassius: Inferences from mitochondrial 16S and ND1 sequences" (PDF). Zoological Science. 22 (3): 343–351. doi:10.2108/zsj.22.343. hdl:2115/14485. PMID 15795497. S2CID 23898737.
  11. ^ Häuser, Christoph L.; de Jong, Rienk; Lamas, Gerardo; Robbins, Robert K.; Smith, Campbell; Vane-Wright, Richard I. (28 July 2005). . Archived from the original on 9 September 2010. Retrieved 8 November 2010.
  12. ^ Coombs, Simon (30 September 2010). . butterfly-guide.co.uk. Archived from the original on 16 March 2017. Retrieved 11 November 2010.
  13. ^ Brock, Jim P.; Kaufman, Kenn (2003). Butterflies of North America. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. ISBN 0-618-15312-8.
  14. ^ Stumpe, Felix. "Parnassius arctica Eisner, 1968". Russian-Insects.com. Retrieved 9 November 2010.
  15. ^ Mani, M. S. (1968). Ecology and Biogeography of High Altitude Insects. Volume 4 of Series entomologica. Springer. p. 530. ISBN 978-90-6193-114-0. Retrieved 9 November 2010.
  16. ^ von Euw, J.; Reichstein, T. & Rothschild, M. (1968). "Aristolochic acid in the swallowtail butterfly Pachlioptera aristolochiae". Israel Journal of Chemistry. 6: 659–670. doi:10.1002/ijch.196800084..
  17. ^ Doyle, Amanda. "The roles of temperature and host plant interactions in larval development and population ecology of Parnassius smintheus Doubleday, the Rocky Mountain Apollo butterfly" (PDF). University of Alberta. Retrieved 13 November 2017.
  18. ^ a b Moran, Mark. . Archived from the original on 1 September 2016. Retrieved 19 October 2013.
  19. ^ a b "Swallowtail Butterflies". University of Michigan. Retrieved 19 October 2013.
  20. ^ Bingham, C. T. (1905). The Fauna of British India, Including Ceylon and Burma: Butterflies Volume I. London: Taylor and Francis. p. 519. Retrieved 7 November 2010.
  21. ^ The vein is since named 2A or second anal vein in modern venation systems.
  22. ^ a b c Scriber, Mark; Hagen, Robert; Lederhouse, Robert (February 1996). "Genetics of Mimicry in the Tiger Swallowtail Butterflies, Papilio glaucus and P. canadensis (Lepidoptera: Papilionidae)". Evolution. 50 (1): 222–236. doi:10.2307/2410795. JSTOR 2410795. PMID 28568864.
  23. ^ Koch, Bernhardt; Behnecke, Bettina; ffrench-Constant, Richard H. (May 2000). "The molecuar basis of melanism and mimicry in a swallowtail butterfly". Current Biology. 10 (10): 591–4. doi:10.1016/s0960-9822(00)00494-2. PMID 10837223. S2CID 21556770.
  24. ^ a b Cook, S. E.; Jennifer G. Vernon; Melissa Bateson; Tim Guilford (1994). "Mate Choice in the Polymorphic African Swallowtail Butterfly, Papilio dardanus: male-like females may avoid sexual harassment" (PDF). Animal Behaviour. 47 (2): 389–397. doi:10.1006/anbe.1994.1053. S2CID 53186308. Retrieved 15 September 2013.
  25. ^ Vane-Wright, R.; C.R. Smith (1991). "Phylogenetic Relationships of Three African Swallowtail Butterflies, Papilio dardanus, P. phorcas, and P. constantinus: a cladistic analysis (Lepidoptera: Papilionidae)". Systematic Entomology. Biology of Butterflies. 16 (3): 275–291. doi:10.1111/j.1365-3113.1991.tb00689.x. S2CID 85401171.
  26. ^ Conrad, K.F.; G Pritchard (1989). "Female Dimorphism and Physiological Colour Change in the Damselfly Argia vivida Hagen Odonata: Coenagrionidae". Canadian Journal of Zoology. 67 (2): 298–304. doi:10.1139/z89-044.
  27. ^ Ramel, Alain. "Les Papilionides, une famille en beauté". Les Insectes – Petit cours illustré d'entomologie(The Insects – A short illustrated course in Entomology). Retrieved 8 November 2010. English translation.

Further reading edit

  • Chattopadhyay, J. (2007). Swallowtail Butterflies, Biology & Ecology of a few Indian Species. Desh Prashan, Kolkata, India. – 134 pp. ISBN 978-81-905719-1-3.
  • Glassberg, J. (2001). Butterflies through Binoculars. The West.
  • Guppy, C.S. and Shepard, J.H. (2001). Butterflies of British Columbia.
  • Igarashi, S. (1979). Papilionidae and their early stages [in Japanese]. 2 vols. – Tokyo, Kodansha, 218 pp., 357 pls.
  • James, D.G. & Nunnallee, D. (2011). Life Histories of Cascadia Butterflies.
  • Korolev V.A. (2014). Cataloges on the collection of Lepidoptera. Part II. Papilionidae. – Moscow, 387 p., 20 color tabs, ISBN 978-5-00077-163-1 [1]
  • Pelham, J. (2008). Catalogue of the Butterflies of the United States and Canada.
  • Pyle, R.M. (2002). The Butterflies of Cascadia.
  • Rothschild, L.W. (1895). A revision of the Papilios of the Eastern Hemisphere, exclusive of Africa. Novitates Zoologicae 2(3):167–463 and plates pdf
  • Rothschild, W. and Jordan, K. (1906). A revision of the American Papilios. Novitates Zoologicae 13: 411–752. online (and as pdf) (Facsimile edition ed. P.H. Arnaud, 1967).
  • Seitz, A. (1907). 1. Gattung Papilio, Schwalbenschwänze. In: Seitz, A. (ed). Die Groß-Schmetterlinger der Erde. I. Abteilung (Die Großschmetterlinge des Palaeakrtischen Faunengebietes). 1. Band: Tagfalter. pp. 8–15. F. Lehmann, Stuttgart.
  • Talbot, G. (1939). The Fauna of British India. Butterflies. Volume 1. Papilionidae and Pieridae. Taylor & Francis, London; xxix, 600 pp., 3 pls, 1 map.
  • Tuzov V., Bogdanov P., Devyatkin A., Kaabak L., Korolev V., Murzin V., Samodurov G., Tarassov E. (1997). Guide to the butterflies of Russia and adjacent territories (Lepidoptera, Rhopalocera). Vol. 1. Sofia-Moscow: Pensoft-Press, 480 p., 79 col. plates.
  • Warren, A.D., Davis, K.J., Grishin, N.V., Pelham, J.P., Stangeland, E.M. (2012). Interactive Listing of American Butterflies. [2]

External links edit

  •   Media related to Papilionidae at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Data related to Papilionidae at Wikispecies
  • "Papilionidae" on Tree of Life web project.
  • "Family Papilionidae". Insecta.pro. Retrieved 7 February 2020.
  • Revised GloBIS/GART Papilionidae species checklist. 9 September 2010 at the Wayback Machine
  • GloBIS Database 5 November 2013 at the Wayback Machine Includes type images
  • Natural History Museum, London web site on "Afrotropical Kite Swallowtails".
  • 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.
  • Photoset and description of lesser known species of swallowtails
  • Swallowtails Papilionidae of the World: a pictorial summary. Comprehensive.

swallowtail, butterfly, this, article, about, insect, family, other, uses, swallowtail, swallowtail, butterflies, large, colorful, butterflies, family, papilionidae, include, over, species, though, majority, tropical, members, family, inhabit, every, continent. This article is about the insect family For other uses see Swallowtail Swallowtail butterflies are large colorful butterflies in the family Papilionidae and include over 550 species Though the majority are tropical members of the family inhabit every continent except Antarctica The family includes the largest butterflies in the world the birdwing butterflies of the genus Ornithoptera 1 Swallowtail butterflyPapilio machaonScientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ArthropodaClass InsectaOrder LepidopteraSuperfamily PapilionoideaFamily PapilionidaeLatreille 1802 Type genusPapilioLinnaeus 1758Subfamilies and generaThere are 31 genera and about 600 species Subfamily Baroniinae Baronia Subfamily Parnassiinae Allancastria Archon Bhutanitis Doritites Hypermnestra Luehdorfia Parnassius Sericinus Subfamily Papilioninae Atrophaneura Battus Byasa Cressida Euryades Eurytides Graphium Iphiclides Lamproptera Losaria Meandrusa Mimoides Ornithoptera Pachliopta Papilio Parides Pharmacophagus Protesilaus Protographium Teinopalpus Trogonoptera Troides Subfamily Praepapilioninae Praepapilio source source source Swallowtail butterflySwallowtails have a number of distinctive features for example the papilionid caterpillar bears a repugnatorial organ called the osmeterium on its prothorax The osmeterium normally remains hidden but when threatened the larva turns it outward through a transverse dorsal groove by inflating it with fluid 2 The forked appearance in some of the swallowtails hindwings which can be seen when the butterfly is resting with its wings spread gave rise to the common name swallowtail As for its formal name Linnaeus chose Papilio for the type genus as papilio is Latin for butterfly For the specific epithets of the genus Linnaeus applied the names of Greek figures to the swallowtails The type species Papilio machaon honored Machaon one of the sons of Asclepius mentioned in the Iliad 3 Further the species Papilio homerus is named after the Greek poet Homer 4 The Mon of the Taira clan of Japan is an Agehachō swallowtail butterfly Contents 1 Taxonomy 1 1 Subfamilies 1 1 1 Baroniinae 1 1 2 Parnassiinae 1 1 3 Papilioninae 1 1 4 Praepapilioninae 2 Phylogeny 3 Distribution 4 Food 5 Life cycle 6 Distinguishing characteristics 7 Special adaptations and defense 7 1 Biological basis for polymorphisms in mimicry 7 2 Mimicry 8 Mating and young 9 In culture 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksTaxonomy editSubfamilies edit The genera of extant swallowtails are usually classified into three subfamilies Baroniinae Parnassiinae and Papilioninae the latter two being further divided into tribes In swallowtails besides morphological characteristics the choice of food plants and ecological lifestyle reflect phylogeny and classification Baroniinae edit The Baroniinae are a monotypic subfamily restricted to a very small region in Mexico and are considered to be the most basal of the subfamilies Baronia brevicornis is considered to be a relict species and shares features with a fossil taxon Pra Papilio Baronia is unique among papilionidae as having an Acacia species family Leguminosae as its food plant 5 Subfamily Baroniene nbsp Short horned baronia Baronia brevicornis Parnassiinae edit The Parnassiinae are a subfamily of essentially Holarctic butterflies The vast majority of species mostly Parnassius can be found in mountain habitats Parnassiinines can also be found in other habitats such as arid deserts Hypermnestra humid forests Luehdorfia and even lowland meadows Zerynthia 6 The tribes recognized in the Parnassiinae are Parnassiini Zerynthiini and Luehdorfiini Tribe Parnassiini contains two genera Hypermnestra largely confined to central Asia and the genus Parnassius the Apollos a distinctive group of many species all of which are alpine and capable of living at high altitudes Most Parnassius have two small reddish spots on their hindwings The tribe Luehdorfiini contains the genera Archon of Asia minor and the genus Luehdorfia of China and Japan These two tribes have evolved to change their food plants while the third tribe Zerynthiini has retained the archetypical papilionid food plant the lowland vine Aristolochia Zerynthiini comprises four genera Sericinus Bhutanitis Zerynthia and Allancastria 5 13 7 Subfamily Parnassiinae nbsp Mountain Apollo Parnassius apollo tribe Parnassiini nbsp False Apollo Archon apollinus tribe Luehdorfiini nbsp Spanish festoon Zerynthia rumina tribe Zerynthiini nbsp Bhutan glory Bhutanitis lidderdalii tribe ZerynthiiniPapilioninae edit The tribes recognized in the Papilioninae are Leptocircini Teinopalpini Troidini and Papilionini Subfamily Papilioninae nbsp Zebra swallowtail Eurytides marcellus tribe Leptocircini nbsp Kaiser i hind Teinopalpus imperialis tribe Teinopalpini nbsp Palawan birdwing Trogonoptera trojana tribe Troidini nbsp Spicebush swallowtail Papilio troilus tribe Papilionini nbsp Old World swallowtail Papilio machaon tribe Papilionini nbsp Cairns birdwing Ornithoptera euphorion G R Gray 1852 nbsp Western tiger swallowtail Papilio rutulus tribe Papilionini nbsp Scarce swallowtail Iphiclides podalirius tribe LeptocirciniPraepapilioninae edit An additional subfamily Praepapilioninae consisting of a single genus Praepapilio includes two species of extinct butterflies each member being described from single fossils found in a middle Eocene deposit in Colorado United States Durden and Rose 1978 8 Phylogeny editA phylogeny of the Papilionidae based on Nazari 2007 is given 1 7 Phylogeny of the Papilionidae Papilionidae Praepapilioninae Baroniinae Parnassiinae Parnassiini Zerynthiini Luehdorfiini Papilioninae Leptocircini Teinopalpini Papilionini Troidiniafter Nazari 2007 1 7 It is now accepted that the subfamily Papilioninae is monophyletic 1 The swallowtail butterflies in the nominate tribe Papilionini number about 225 species and studies have been made on their host plant coevolution and phylogeny Old morphological classifications were also found to be valid in that they formed clusters Species belonging to the groups that use Rutaceae as host plants formed two groups corresponding to Old World and American taxa Those that fed on Lauraceae and Magnoliaceae were found to form another cluster which includes both Asian and American taxa 9 The Parnassinae like the Papilioninae were also believed to be monophyletic based on morphological studies but recent studies based on both morphological and molecular characteristics suggest that this is not the case 1 Of the Parnassiinae the genera Parnassius and Hypermnestra were found to be extremely close based on molecular studies 10 and are now considered to be part of the tribe Parnassiini 7 The two taxa Archon and Luehdorfia have been found to be closely related through analysis of nuclear and mitochondrial DNA and though they share no morphological similarities have now been united in the tribe Luehdorfiini 7 The subfamily Baroniinae is represented by the sole representative species Baronia brevicornis They are unique in the family to use the Fabaceae Leguminosae as their larval host plants The Baronninae and the extinct subfamily Praepapilioninae share many external similarities and are traditionally considered to be the most primitive subfamilies and sister to the rest of the swallowtails Recent research suggests that this may not be the case the Baroniinae being closely related to only the Parnassiinae and Praepapilio to only the Papilionini and neither taxa being sister to the rest of the swallowtails 1 Distribution editAs of 2005 552 extant species have been identified which are distributed across the tropical and temperate regions 11 Various species inhabit altitudes ranging from sea level to high mountains as in the case of most species of Parnassius The majority of swallowtail species and the greatest diversity are found in the tropics and subtropical regions between 20 N and 20 S 5 particularly Southeast Asia and between 20 N and 40 N in East Asia Only 12 species are found in Europe and only one species Papilio machaon is found in the British Isles 12 North America has 40 species including several tropical species and Parnassius 13 The northernmost swallowtail is the Siberian Apollo Parnassius arcticus found in the Arctic Circle in northeastern Yakutia at altitudes of 1500 meters above sea level 14 In the Himalayas various Apollo species such as Parnassius epaphus have been found at altitudes of 6 000 meters above sea level 15 221 Food edit nbsp Scarce swallowtail lavender near AdriaticThe caterpillars of various swallowtail butterfly species feed on a wide range of different plants most depending on only one of five families Aristolochiaceae Annonaceae Lauraceae Umbelliferae Apiaceae and Rutaceae By eating some of these toxic plants the caterpillars sequester aristolochic acid which renders both the caterpillars and the butterflies of some of these as toxic thus protecting them from predators 16 Similarly the Parnassius smintheus sequesters sarmentosin from its host plant Sedum lanceolatum for protection from predators 17 Swallowtail tribes Zerynthiini Parnassiinae Luehdorfiini Parnassiinae and Troidini Papilioninae almost exclusively use the family Aristolochiaceae as their host plants For example the eastern black swallowtail s Papilio polyxenes main host plant in the wild is Queen Anne s lace but they also eat garden plants in the carrot family including carrots parsley dill and fennel 18 Adult swallowtails sip nectar but also mud and sometimes manure 19 Life cycle editThe detailed descriptions of morphological characteristics of the Papilionidae as quoted in Bingham 1905 are as follows 20 1 2 Egg Dome shaped smooth or obscurely facetted not as high as wide somewhat leathery opaque Doherty Larva Stout smooth or with a series of fleshy tubercles on the dorsum sometimes with a raised fleshy protuberance the so called hood or crest on the fourth segment The second segment has a transverse opening out of which the larva protrudes at will and an erect forked glandular fleshy organ that emits a strong penetrating and somewhat unpleasant odor Pupa Variable in form but most often curved backwards It is angulate with the head truncate or rounded and the back of abdomen is smooth or tuberculate It is attached by the tail normally in a perpendicular position and further secured by a silken girth round the middle In Parnassius the pupa is placed in a loose silken web between leaves Imago Wings extraordinarily variable in shape Hindwing very frequently has a tail which may be slender or broad and spatulate but is always an extension of the termen at vein 4 In one genus Armandia the termen of the hindwing is prolonged into tails at the apices of veins 2 and 3 as well as at vein 4 Forewing except in the aberrant genera Parnassius and Hypermnestra with all 12 veins present and in addition a short internal vein vein 1 a 21 that invariably terminates on the dorsal margin Stages of development of a papilionid the giant swallowtail Papilio cresphontes nbsp Egg nbsp Larva nbsp Pupa nbsp ImagoDistinguishing characteristics editThe key characteristics that differentiate the Papilionidae from the other butterfly families are 1 The osmeterium is a forked fleshy eversible organ found in the prothoracic segment of caterpillars Venation in swallowtails the second anal vein 2A extends up to the wing margin and does not link with the first anal vein 1A These veins are fused in other butterfly families and 2A does not reach the wing margin The sclerites of the cervix membranous neck between the head and thorax are fused beneath the neck where the muscles for head movement are anchored nbsp Old World swallowtail caterpillar everting its osmeterium in defense nbsp Papilio demodocus larva applying one horn of the evaginated osmeterium to an offending finger nbsp Adult forewing of Graphium agetes Second anal vein 2A extends up to the wing margin and does not link with the first anal vein 1A nbsp Papilionid chrysalis are typically attached to a substrate by the cremaster and with head up held by a silk girdle Special adaptations and defense editSwallowtail butterflies practice Batesian mimicry a behavior in which the butterflies appearance closely resemble that of distasteful species that prevents predation Swallowtails differ from many animals that practice mimicry The tiger swallowtail butterfly Papilio glaucus exhibits a female limited polymorphism for Batesian mimicry and others such as the Canadian tiger swallowtail Papilio canadensis do not display any form of mimicry 22 Predators include the red winged blackbird Pennsylvania firefly five lined skink green darner goldenrod spider Chinese mantis fiery searcher and striped skunk 18 Biological basis for polymorphisms in mimicry edit Not all individuals in some species are identical in appearance For example Papilio glaucus eastern tiger swallowtail Y linkage determines whether the females are either wild type yellow and black or melanic dark melanin replaces the yellow background 23 This genetic difference stems from the fact that melanism is controlled by a single gene which controls the level of dopamine in the organism The enzyme BAS which assists dopamine in producing the yellow pigmentation normally found on the wings background is suppressed Without the pigmentation the butterfly appears mostly black the melanic form and is a Batesian mimic of Battus philenor the pipevine swallowtail There are also Papilio glaucus that are not wholly black several possess an intermediate sooty color and are sensitive to temperature 22 The different polymorphisms wild type melanic and the sooty intermediate depend upon the geographical distribution and abundance of its mimic the Battus philenor whose wing color varies depending on its geographical location 22 In order to be successfully confused for the B philenor by predators the Papilio glaucus s background wing color matches that of the B philenor residing in the same regional area Studies support this theory in the southeastern United States the relative abundance of melanic females has been found to geographically correlate with B philenor Mimicry edit Only certain subsets of swallowtails practice mimicry Species differ in whether one or both sexes is mimetic and whether the mimicry is monomorphic or polymorphic A phenomenon which has received particular attention is female limited polymorphism in which only the females of a species are mimetic and polymorphic often mimicking different distantly related aposematic butterflies This polymorphism is seen in Papilio dardanus the African swallowtail butterfly whose females have three different morphs for wing color pattern a black and white pattern for Batesian mimicry a black and yellow pattern that resembles the males of the species and a pattern with orange patches that resembles the elderly males of the species 24 Given that the males of the species which do not have Batesian mimicry are preyed upon much more frequently by predators than the females an ongoing question is why females would exhibit the non mimetic wing pattern which would seemingly lower their fitness compared to the mimicry form The pipevine swallowtail exhibits Batesian mimicry as well Several hypotheses for this phenomenon were made the two noteworthy being the pseudosexual selection hypothesis and the male avoidance hypothesis In the pseudosexual hypothesis male butterflies aggressively approached the male looking females and then mellowed their behavior into sexual behavior when they were close enough to identify them as females 25 In the male avoidance hypothesis female butterflies disguise themselves in an attempt to evade male harassment as courtship can be harmful time consuming and attract predators 26 One study recorded male responses to females of each morphs and found that the males consistently favored the Batesian mimics then the black and yellow and then the morph with orange patches 24 The scientists concluded that frequency dependent selection did lead to equal success for all three alternative strategies the Batesian females suffered the fewest predators but their fitness was reduced the most by sexual harassment while the other two faced lower sexual harassment but also lost fitness from predators attacks Mating and young editAfter mating the male Parnassines produce a glue like substance that is used to seal the female genital opening and prevent other males from mating 27 They lay individual eggs on the underside of the leaves of their food plants 19 There is no parental investment once the eggs have been laid The pupae are typically attached to the substrate by the cremaster but with head up held by a silk girdle The Apollos however pupate in debris on the ground and also build a loose cocoon In the temperate regions the winters are passed in a pupal diapause stage In culture editSince swallowtail butterflies are large colorful and attractive they have been targeted by butterfly collectors The largest of these the birdwing butterflies are particularly sought after and are cultured in butterfly farms to supply collectors Many members of the family as larvae feed on plants of the citrus family Rutaceae making some of these attractive butterflies pests in citrus orchards The Oregon swallowtail is the state insect of Oregon The eastern tiger swallowtail is the state insect of Virginia and the state butterfly of Georgia Delaware and South Carolina The black swallowtail is the state butterfly of Oklahoma References edit a b c d e f g Reed Robert D Sperling Felix A H 2006 Papilionidae The Swallowtail Butterflies Tree of Life Web Project Retrieved 7 November 2010 Richards O W Davies R G 1977 Imms General Textbook of Entomology Volume 1 Structure Physiology and Development Volume 2 Classification and Biology Berlin Springer ISBN 0 412 61390 5 Salmon Michael A Marren Peter Harley Basil The Aurelian Legacy British Butterflies and Their Collectors page 252 Publisher University of California Press 2001 ISBN 978 0 520 22963 1 Lehnert Matthew S Kramer Valerie R Rawlins John E Verdecia Vanessa Daniels Jaret C 10 July 2017 Jamaica s Critically Endangered Butterfly A Review of the Biology and Conservation Status of the Homerus Swallowtail Papilio Pterourus homerus Fabricius Insects 8 3 68 doi 10 3390 insects8030068 PMC 5620688 PMID 28698508 a b c 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 Nazari Vazrick 2006 Parnassius Latreille 1804 Tree of Life Web Project Retrieved 7 November 2010 a b c d e Nazari Vazrick Sperling Felix A H 2006 Parnassiinae Duponchel 1835 Tree of Life Tree of Life Web Project Retrieved 7 November 2010 Durden C J Rose H amp Rothschild Miriam 1978 Butterflies from the middle Eocene the earliest occurrence of fossil Papilionidae Lepidoptera Pearce Sellards Ser Tex Mem Mus 29 5 1 25 Aubert J Legal L Descimon H Michel F 1999 Molecular phylogeny of swallowtail butterflies of the tribe Papilionini Papilionidae Lepidoptera Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 12 2 156 167 doi 10 1006 mpev 1998 0605 PMID 10381318 Katoh T Chichvarkhin A Yagi T Omoto K 2005 Phylogeny and evolution of butterflies of the genus Parnassius Inferences from mitochondrial 16S and ND1 sequences PDF Zoological Science 22 3 343 351 doi 10 2108 zsj 22 343 hdl 2115 14485 PMID 15795497 S2CID 23898737 Hauser Christoph L de Jong Rienk Lamas Gerardo Robbins Robert K Smith Campbell Vane Wright Richard I 28 July 2005 Papilionidae revised GloBIS GART species checklist 2nd draft Archived from the original on 9 September 2010 Retrieved 8 November 2010 Coombs Simon 30 September 2010 European Butterfly checklist butterfly guide co uk Archived from the original on 16 March 2017 Retrieved 11 November 2010 Brock Jim P Kaufman Kenn 2003 Butterflies of North America Boston Houghton Mifflin ISBN 0 618 15312 8 Stumpe Felix Parnassius arctica Eisner 1968 Russian Insects com Retrieved 9 November 2010 Mani M S 1968 Ecology and Biogeography of High Altitude Insects Volume 4 of Series entomologica Springer p 530 ISBN 978 90 6193 114 0 Retrieved 9 November 2010 von Euw J Reichstein T amp Rothschild M 1968 Aristolochic acid in the swallowtail butterfly Pachlioptera aristolochiae Israel Journal of Chemistry 6 659 670 doi 10 1002 ijch 196800084 Doyle Amanda The roles of temperature and host plant interactions in larval development and population ecology of Parnassius smintheus Doubleday the Rocky Mountain Apollo butterfly PDF University of Alberta Retrieved 13 November 2017 a b Moran Mark Eastern Black Swallowtail Archived from the original on 1 September 2016 Retrieved 19 October 2013 a b Swallowtail Butterflies University of Michigan Retrieved 19 October 2013 Bingham C T 1905 The Fauna of British India Including Ceylon and Burma Butterflies Volume I London Taylor and Francis p 519 Retrieved 7 November 2010 The vein is since named 2A or second anal vein in modern venation systems a b c Scriber Mark Hagen Robert Lederhouse Robert February 1996 Genetics of Mimicry in the Tiger Swallowtail Butterflies Papilio glaucus and P canadensis Lepidoptera Papilionidae Evolution 50 1 222 236 doi 10 2307 2410795 JSTOR 2410795 PMID 28568864 Koch Bernhardt Behnecke Bettina ffrench Constant Richard H May 2000 The molecuar basis of melanism and mimicry in a swallowtail butterfly Current Biology 10 10 591 4 doi 10 1016 s0960 9822 00 00494 2 PMID 10837223 S2CID 21556770 a b Cook S E Jennifer G Vernon Melissa Bateson Tim Guilford 1994 Mate Choice in the Polymorphic African Swallowtail Butterfly Papilio dardanus male like females may avoid sexual harassment PDF Animal Behaviour 47 2 389 397 doi 10 1006 anbe 1994 1053 S2CID 53186308 Retrieved 15 September 2013 Vane Wright R C R Smith 1991 Phylogenetic Relationships of Three African Swallowtail Butterflies Papilio dardanus P phorcas and P constantinus a cladistic analysis Lepidoptera Papilionidae Systematic Entomology Biology of Butterflies 16 3 275 291 doi 10 1111 j 1365 3113 1991 tb00689 x S2CID 85401171 Conrad K F G Pritchard 1989 Female Dimorphism and Physiological Colour Change in the Damselfly Argia vivida Hagen Odonata Coenagrionidae Canadian Journal of Zoology 67 2 298 304 doi 10 1139 z89 044 Ramel Alain Les Papilionides une famille en beaute Les Insectes Petit cours illustre d entomologie The Insects A short illustrated course in Entomology Retrieved 8 November 2010 English translation Further reading editChattopadhyay J 2007 Swallowtail Butterflies Biology amp Ecology of a few Indian Species Desh Prashan Kolkata India 134 pp ISBN 978 81 905719 1 3 Glassberg J 2001 Butterflies through Binoculars The West Guppy C S and Shepard J H 2001 Butterflies of British Columbia Igarashi S 1979 Papilionidae and their early stages in Japanese 2 vols Tokyo Kodansha 218 pp 357 pls James D G amp Nunnallee D 2011 Life Histories of Cascadia Butterflies Korolev V A 2014 Cataloges on the collection of Lepidoptera Part II Papilionidae Moscow 387 p 20 color tabs ISBN 978 5 00077 163 1 1 Pelham J 2008 Catalogue of the Butterflies of the United States and Canada Pyle R M 2002 The Butterflies of Cascadia Rothschild L W 1895 A revision of the Papilios of the Eastern Hemisphere exclusive of Africa Novitates Zoologicae 2 3 167 463 and plates pdf Rothschild W and Jordan K 1906 A revision of the American Papilios Novitates Zoologicae 13 411 752 online and as pdf Facsimile edition ed P H Arnaud 1967 Seitz A 1907 1 Gattung Papilio Schwalbenschwanze In Seitz A ed Die Gross Schmetterlinger der Erde I Abteilung Die Grossschmetterlinge des Palaeakrtischen Faunengebietes 1 Band Tagfalter pp 8 15 F Lehmann Stuttgart Talbot G 1939 The Fauna of British India Butterflies Volume 1 Papilionidae and Pieridae Taylor amp Francis London xxix 600 pp 3 pls 1 map Tuzov V Bogdanov P Devyatkin A Kaabak L Korolev V Murzin V Samodurov G Tarassov E 1997 Guide to the butterflies of Russia and adjacent territories Lepidoptera Rhopalocera Vol 1 Sofia Moscow Pensoft Press 480 p 79 col plates Warren A D Davis K J Grishin N V Pelham J P Stangeland E M 2012 Interactive Listing of American Butterflies 2 External links edit nbsp Media related to Papilionidae at Wikimedia Commons nbsp Data related to Papilionidae at Wikispecies nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1905 New International Encyclopedia article Swallowtail Papilionidae on Tree of Life web project Family Papilionidae Insecta pro Retrieved 7 February 2020 Revised GloBIS GART Papilionidae species checklist Archived 9 September 2010 at the Wayback Machine GloBIS Database Archived 5 November 2013 at the Wayback Machine Includes type images Natural History Museum London web site on Afrotropical Kite Swallowtails 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 Photoset and description of lesser known species of swallowtails Swallowtails Papilionidae of the World a pictorial summary Comprehensive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Swallowtail butterfly amp oldid 1183370743, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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