Observations on the biology of Afrotropical Hesperiidae (Lepidoptera). Part 9. Hesperiinae incertae sedis: Zingiberales feeders, genera of unknown biology and an overview of the Hesperiinae incertae sedis
Author
Cock, Matthew J. W.
Author
Congdon, T. Colin E.
Author
Collins, Steve C.
text
Zootaxa
2016
4066
3
201
247
journal article
51187
10.11646/zootaxa.4066.3.1
efd9df5e-1439-4724-ae76-a219f7c3ce70
1175-5326
264653
680D0FB4-F3BC-4562-B214-631067287218
Caenides dacena
Hewitson, 1876
Hewitson (1876)
described this species from
Gaboon
, i.e.
Gabon
and it is found from
Sierra Leone
to
Uganda
,
South Sudan
and north-west
Tanzania
(
Evans 1937
,
Ackery
et al
. 1995
,
Congdon & Collins 1998
).
As
noted above, this species does not belong in
Caenides
, and will require a new genus (
Larsen & Collins 2011
, 2014).
In his key to
Caenides
,
Evans (1937)
treats
C. dacena
has having neither a hindwing hair tuft nor a forewing brand. However, the material reared by
MJWC
from
Cameroon
has a distinct forewing brand in space 2, starting below vein 3 half way between the origin of vein 3 and the spot in space 3, running adjacent to vein 3 and then adjacent to the cell, before turning away from the cell to meet vein two, with a short broad extension below vein
2 in
space 1b. SCC examined material in
ABRI
collected from
Côte d’Ivoire
to
Uganda
, and found that two-thirds of males had a brand visible using a hand lens, although this was most obvious when the wings were at a slight angle to the viewer, i.e. with wings depressed or slightly sprung. It may be that the brand is not always present, that it is only obvious in newly emerged specimens, or could more than one species be involved?
Food plants.
Vuattoux (1999)
reared this species four times in
Côte d’Ivoire
from
Costus afer
(Costaceae)
. This record is repeated by Vande weghe (2010).
MJWC
reared a specimen from the
Costus
sp. shown in
Figure 28
, near Douala,
Cameroon
(
MJWC
90/206). In discussion with Martin Cheek (Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew), we concluded that this photograph represents either
C. afer
or
C. lucanusianus
, although the latter has also been treated as a synonym of
C. afer
and/or
C. maculatus
(Tropicos 2014)
. In captivity, two caterpillars in the final instar completed feeding when offered leaves of
Hedychium
sp. and
Aframomum
sp. but the resultant adults were significantly smaller than others reared through on
Costus
.
Leaf shelters.
The one-cut shelters of the penultimate and final instar caterpillars are made with a cut from the edge of the leaf lamina to close to the midrib, and the distal part of the leaf is then folded upwards.
Caterpillar.
The penultimate instar caterpillar had a uniformly black or very dark brown head; rugose; 2.5 x
2.9mm
wide x high (n=2). The final instar caterpillar (
Figure 29
) measured
38mm
, five days before pupation. Head 3.6 x
4.4mm
wide x high (n=4); indented at vertex; shiny, rugose; very dark brown, except for indistinct dark brown markings: a line down the centre of the frons, a line parallel and close to epicranial suture and a weaker line down face below the apex, which is not always present. These head markings are easily overlooked in life. Their distribution is reminiscent of those of
Hypoleucis ophiusa
(
Figure 26
). Pronotum brown. Body transparent greenbrown; darker dorsal line; rest of body with pale fat bodies showing through cuticle; anal plate dark with pale margin; spiracles light brown, not conspicuous; all legs concolorous. The body becomes brown ventrally at the end of the final instar; the wax glands are restricted to the anterior ventral margin of A1 according to MJWC’s notes, but it would be worth confirming this unusual distribution.
FIGURE 28.
Costus afer
or
C. lucanusianus
, the food plant of
Caenides dacena
, Douala
, Cameroon, 16 Jun 1990, MJWC 90/ 206.
FIGURE 29.
Final instar caterpillar of
Caenides dacena
collected on
Costus
sp. near Douala, Cameroon, 16 Jun 1990; 38mm; MJWC 90/206A.
1
, head anterolateral view;
2
, dorsolateral view.
Pupa.
The pupa is formed in the final leaf shelter. It was not described, but it was photographed (
Figure 30
). The proboscis extends to at least the base of the cremaster, sometimes to the tip. There is a pale brown C-shaped raised rim around the posterior side of the T1 spiracle, measuring
0.7mm
across dorsoventrally, and variably
0.4– 0.6mm
across the rim; this rim surrounds a dark brown conical pit. This feature is also present in
C. dacela
(Cock
et al
. 2014, Figure 55). The pupal stage lasted 25–29 days.