Celaenorrhinus proxima proxima ( Mabille 1877 )

COCK, MATTHEW J. W. & CONGDON, T. COLIN E., 2011, Observations on the biology of Afrotropical Hesperiidae (Lepidoptera) principally from Kenya. Part 3. Pyrginae: Celaenorrhinini, Zootaxa 3033 (1), pp. 1-67 : 10-14

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3033.1.1

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/6C3D2156-6E45-FFC0-E0FE-FAD5FDE730C4

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Celaenorrhinus proxima proxima ( Mabille 1877 )
status

 

Celaenorrhinus proxima proxima ( Mabille 1877) View in CoL ( Figures 1.3–5 View FIGURE 1 View FIGURE 2 View FIGURE 3 View FIGURE 4 View FIGURE 5 , 6–11 View FIGURE 6 View FIGURE 7 View FIGURE 9 View FIGURE 10 View FIGURE 11 )

This species was described from Congo ( Mabille 1877), but is widespread from Sierra Leone to Kenya. TCEC has also found it in Minzoro Forest in north–western Tanzania. Evans (1937) described a second subspecies, toro, from Daro Forest, Toro, Uganda, which is larger, but with smaller spots, and Berger (1976) described a third subspecies maesseni from Ghana (type locality), Guinea and Côte d’Ivoire. The status of these subspecies will need further evaluation, as they are likely to be valid species. Thus, ssp. proxima is the Kenyan subspecies, but as noted above it has been confused with an undescribed species nr. dargei .

Adult behaviour See under C. undescribed nr. dargei above.

Food plants

I have reared C. proxima from Mimulopsis solmsii , M. alpina and Phaulopsis imbricata ( Figure 6.2 View FIGURE 6 ) (all Acanthaceae ). Larsen (1991) gives Mimulopsis based on my rearing in Kenya. Both Mimulopsis spp. are common roadside plants in parts of Kakamega Forest, and for a time I confused the two in the vegetative state, although later I concluded that M. alpina has the petioles of the young leaves red, while those of M. solmsii are green. Mimulopsis is a montane genus, noted for synchronised flowering approximately every nine years ( Blundell 1987, M. Cheek pers. comm. 2011). I believe I have also found early stages of this or C. undescribed near dargei on a Brillantaisia Ovum

The ovum is laid on the leaf under surface in the middle of the lamina. It is rounded, with the base flattened, and the widest part well above the base; 0.81 mm diameter at widest; the hatched ovum is white, with about 60 fine ribs, joined by similarly fine lateral lines at right angles in close to a square grid.

Leaf shelters

The first shelter is oval. One measured about 6 x 4 mm and was cut from the edge of the leaf lamina (90/75); another measured 4 x 2.5 mm and was cut from the middle of the lamina, close to the egg. The second shelter is usually rounded with a diameter of about 12 mm (90/75), and again is cut from the edge of the leaf lamina. It may also be more clearly two-cut with the edge of the leaf forming a straight edge to the shelter ( Figure 7 View FIGURE 7 ).

On one occasion I collected a pupa; it was formed in a shelter between two leaves of M. solmsii near Ikuywa Steam, Kakamega Forest (87/20B).

Caterpillar

My descriptions of the early stages of C. p. proxima are limited, partly because more comprehensive descriptions were prepared of material that wasn’t reared through that I assumed was C. proxima , but I now know could also have been C. undescribed nr. dargei . reared to pupa which died, but identified from pupal remains). 12 mm; head 2.81 x 2.65 mm wide x high; flattened on top; dark brown; shiny, rugose. T1 transverse plate, narrow dark on posterior margin. Body dull dark green with transparent cuticle, through which fat bodies give a lighter tone except along dorsal line; T2–A8 thin white dorsolateral line; slightly more diffuse lateral line; gonads on A5 light green, oval. All legs concolorous. The mature caterpillar grows to at least 23 mm. The penultimate instar is similar, with the head capsule 1.91 x 1.76 mm wide x high.

An n–3 instar caterpillar was collected on Phaulopsis imbricata , Kakamega Forest, 17 Jul 1990 (90/75): 6 mm; head dark brown ventrally, lighter dorsally, 0.86 x 0.86 mm wide x high; body dark translucent; gonads visible A5. In the next instar, the head measured 1.33 x 1.19 mm. Caterpillar instar durations recorded were n–2 7 days; n–1 10 days; final 18 days.

Pupa

Pupa reared from final instar caterpillar 87/20C. 17 mm; cremaster c. 1.5 mm; proboscis reaches tip of cremaster; strong, blunt frontal projection curved upwards and then back; similar but smaller projection on each eye. What purpose, if any, these serve is open to speculation. Colour shiny brown; darker on head, appendages, and transverse rows across dorsum of abdomen. The pupa illustrated ( Figure 9 View FIGURE 9 ) died, but the remains were identified based on the projections over the eyes. Three pupae reared through under Nairobi conditions took 12, 13 and 16 days to emerge.

Natural enemies

A fifth instar caterpillar of either this species or C. sp. undescribed nr. dargei collected on Phaulopsis imbricata in North Kakamega Forest (31 Aug 1995, 95/117) was parasitized by a small gregarious tachinid fly, producing five external puparia, which failed to emerge. The puparia were slender, almost parallel-sided and measured 3.02 (2.67–3.33) x 1.28 (1.19–1.41) mm. Because C. p. proxima has been reared from P. imbricata , whereas C. undescribed nr. dargei hasn’t, I provisionally associate this record with the former host, although it seems likely that parasitoids will attack both species.

Observations from Cameroon

I collected caterpillars of what appear to be this subspecies in a patch of forest near Douala, Cameroon, 16 Jun 1990 on an? Acanthopale sp. (Acanthaceae) (90/205). However, Acanthopale is considered a montane genus (M. Cheek pers. comm. 2011) so the identification of this food plant from near sea level needs confirmation. Only one caterpillar was successfully reared, a female. It was collected as a penultimate instar caterpillar in a typical Celaenorrhinus stage 2 shelter, and moulted to the final instar the next day ( Figure 10 View FIGURE 10 ). Newly moulted, it was 16 mm long. Head 3.04 x 2.90 mm wide x high (n=3); dark brown, shiny, rugose. T1 with light brown shiny dorsal plate down to level of spiracles, darker posteriorly. Body translucent, dark; slightly darker dorsal line; thin white dorsolateral line; diffuse orange dot above spiracle A8; anal plate tinged orange-red on lateral and posterior margins; spiracles pale. This differs from the caterpillar of C. proxima proxima from Kenya in the brown plate T1 which is almost transparent in Kenya material, and the diffuse orange spot A8 and orange-red colouring on the anal plate, neither of which was observed in Kenyan material. It pupated on 6 Jul ( Figure 11 View FIGURE 11 ) and emerged 22 Jul.

The two previous instars were similar; the head capsule of the penultimate instar was 2.02 x 2.02 mm wide x high (n=2), while that of instar n–2 measured 1.38 x 1.38 mm.

oon, 16 Jun 1990; pupated 6 Jul; photographed 17 Jul; emerged 22 Jul; 90/205A. 1, detail of head of (3) lateral view. 2, detail of dorsal part of A1–5 of (3). 3, lateral view.

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