Bicyclus ignobilis Butler

Brattström, Oskar, Aduse-Poku, Kwaku, Collins, Steve C. & Brakefield, Paul M., 2015, Revision of the Bicyclus ignobilis species-group (Lepidoptera: Nymphalidae: Satyrinae) with descriptions of two new species, Zootaxa 4018 (1), pp. 57-79 : 64

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4018.1.3

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:1D7114C5-225C-403E-9F08-F28B5E1E6571

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5657744

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/F1278799-FFCE-FFF5-CE96-C090ADC1FECA

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Bicyclus ignobilis Butler
status

stat. nov.

Bicyclus ignobilis Butler View in CoL stat. rev.

( Figs. 2–6 View FIGURES 2 – 6 , 27–28 View FIGURES 27 – 29 , 32–33 View FIGURES 30 – 36 )

Mycalesis ignobilis Butler 1870 ( Gold Coast = Ghana)

Bicyclus ignobilis eurini Condamin & Fox 1963 View in CoL (Lolodorf, Cameroon) syn. nov. Bicyclus ignobilis acutus Condamin 1965b View in CoL (Bwamba Forest, Uganda) syn. nov.

Material examined. Type material: Holotype ( ignobilis ) ♀: Gold Coast ( Ghana), No further data, BMNH (E) #1054538 ( BMNH). Holotype (acutus) ♂: Uganda, Buamba Forest (0°49’N, 30°04’E), Sem[u]liki Valley, 2,300– 2,800 ft., 3–7.xi.1911, S.A. Neave leg., No. Rh. 18232 ( BMNH). Allotype (acutus) ♀: Uganda, Budongo Forest (1°45’N, 31°25’E), Unyoro, 3,400 ft., 11–15.xii.1911, S.A. Neave leg., No. Rh. 18233 ( BMNH).

Non-type material. 276 ♂ & 453 ♀. See Supplementary Table 1.

Diagnosis. Both sexes of B. ignobilis usually lack an eyespot in space 3 on the ventral hindwing ( Figs. 2–4 View FIGURES 2 – 6 , 32–33 View FIGURES 30 – 36 ), while all other species in the ignobilis- group generally have this spot fully developed. However, there is variation in this trait and occasional specimens of B. ignobilis may have a fully developed eyespot. Nevertheless it is a useful initial diagnostic tool before looking at more subtle characters, but not something to alone rely on for identification. The male can be identified by the presence of an extended comb of short shiny black hairs extending from space 1c, in a direction towards the tornal point of the wing and partly covering a prominently enlarged section of vein 1b. The vein is enlarged for about one half to two-thirds of its total length starting from near the base of the wing, and the enlarged section is covered with modified beige scales clearly standing out from the darker colour of the wing ( Fig. 6 View FIGURES 2 – 6 ). There are no traces of androconial structures on the dorsal forewing. The female is harder to identify in cases where the eyespot in space 3 on the ventral hindwing is not missing, but in general the shape of the forewing apical band should be sufficient. Specimens from the eastern part of the range ( Fig. 33 View FIGURES 30 – 36 ) have vein 4 more heavily marked in dark, almost breaking up the apical patch in a similar way as in B. maesseni ( Fig. 31 View FIGURES 30 – 36 ) (see section on female identification below). However, the species are only co-occurring in West Africa, where B. ignobilis generally have a more solid apical patch ( Fig. 32 View FIGURES 30 – 36 ). It is therefore a quite reliable identification cue in the areas where the two species occur sympatrically. Across its entire range there is a clinal change in the wing pattern in both sexes of B. ignobilis . The main difference is a gradual change in the shape of the ventral hindwing discal band that gets a sharper angle at the distal end of the cell of both wings in an eastwards direction. Another less marked difference is a generally cleaner white and better-developed apical band in males from further east, western males tend to have faintly marked yellow white patch ( Fig. 3 View FIGURES 2 – 6 ). In addition, as stated above, the female band is often a little more broken up by vein 4 in the eastern parts of the range.

Supression of subspecific taxa. The rather strong geographic variation in the species was the basis for the descriptions of two additional subspecies. Specimens from between Liberia and western Nigeria were assigned to the nominate subspecies (Type locality: Ghana), while the name B. ignobilis eurini Condamin & Fox 1963 was assigned to specimens between eastern Nigeria and DRC (Type locality: Lolodorf, Cameroon). The populations found in the extreme east of the range, mainly Uganda and Tanzania, were assigned the name B. ignobilis acutus Condamin 1965b (Type locality: Bwamba Forest, Uganda). However, Condamin (1973) later suggested that this difference might indeed be clinal, and it is likely that he saw more material of an intermediate morphology in the time between describing the subspecies in the first place up until writing his 1973 monograph. After investigating over 700 specimens from across the entire range of the species, without finding any area where a sharp transition between the previously described subspecies takes place, we hereby suppress eurini and acutus as valid names and consider B. ignobilis as a single taxon with a marked clinal variation.

Distribution. The species is distributed between Sierra Leone and Central Uganda, reaching the Lake Victoria forests in Eastern Tanzania. It extends further south than any other species in the ignobilis -group with a small number of records in southern DRC ( Fig. 27–28 View FIGURES 27 – 29 ).

Comments. The original description of the species ( Butler 1870) does not mention anything regarding the male morphology, and it is likely that the single female individual in BMNH currently recognised as a type (Voucher ID: BMNH(E)1054533) was the only specimen available to Butler. Aurivillius appears to have made the first published description of B. ignobilis males. In his report ( Aurivillius 1893) on material collected by Yngve Sjöstedt in Cameroon between 1890 and 1891, he clearly notes the black haircomb on the hindwing. Sjöstedt was reported to have collected two pairs of the species, and four matching specimens bearing labels with his name are still in the collections of NHRS. The types of Bicyclus ignobilis eurini were not studied (they are located in the Carnegie Museum in Pittsburgh, USA). However, the original publication ( Condamin & Fox 1963) has detailed photos of the holotype and allotype, and describes the main morphological characters in extensive detail. We did investigate several specimens from the same general location in Cameroon (Supplementary table 1).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Lepidoptera

Family

Nymphalidae

Genus

Bicyclus

Loc

Bicyclus ignobilis Butler

Brattström, Oskar, Aduse-Poku, Kwaku, Collins, Steve C. & Brakefield, Paul M. 2015
2015
Loc

Bicyclus ignobilis acutus

Condamin 1965
1965
Loc

Bicyclus ignobilis eurini

Condamin & Fox 1963
1963
Loc

Mycalesis ignobilis

Butler 1870
1870
GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF