Celaenorrhinus proxima maesseni Berger 1976
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3033.1.1 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/6C3D2156-6E42-FFC3-E0FF-FF44FB6C3473 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Celaenorrhinus proxima maesseni Berger 1976 |
status |
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Celaenorrhinus proxima maesseni Berger 1976 View in CoL
I reared this subspecies once from caterpillars collected in the Forêt de Yapo, Côte d’Ivoire, 4 Dec 1988 (88/202A). The food plant was an unidentified species of Acanthaceae , which I considered close to Justicia (e.g. Figures 21.2 View FIGURE 21 and 51.1 View FIGURE 51 ) and Hypoestes (e.g. Figures 21.1 View FIGURE 21 , 28 View FIGURE 28 and 58 View FIGURE 58 ). Larsen (2005) gives Mimulopsis as a food plant, but this was based on my observations of ssp. proxima from Kenya ( Larsen 1991).
Leaf shelters
Shelters were typical of Celaenorrhinus spp. Stage 1 was a one-cut shelter in the leaf lamina, 6 x 7 mm. Stage 2 was a two-cut shelter from the edge of the leaf, 14 x 15 mm. Another two-cut shelter of 30 x 15 mm was probably a stage 3 shelter. Two penultimate instar caterpillars were collected, one in the stage 2 shelter, and the other ready to moult in the stage 3 shelter.
Caterpillar
Two days after collection, and ten days before moulting, the penultimate instar caterpillar measured 12 mm. Head dark brown, almost black ventrally; shield-shaped, rugose. T1 with transparent dorsal plate. Body dull green through transparent cuticle; dorsal line slightly darker; sharply defined narrow white dorsolateral line T2–A8; similar lateral line running through spiracles; legs concolorous. The final instar was similar and lasted 17 days.
Pupa The pupa was not distinguished from that of C. p. proxima and was not photographed in life.
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