Byasa polyeuctes
{{Short description|Species of butterfly}}
{{Speciesbox
| name = Common windmill
| image = Byasa polyeuctes termessus 20140927.jpg
| image_caption = B. p. termessus
| taxon = Byasa polyeuctes
| authority = (Doubleday, 1842){{cite web |url=http://www.insects-online.de/frames/papilio.htm |title=Papilionidae – revised GloBIS/GART species checklist (2nd draft) |author1=Häuser, Christoph L. |author2=de Jong, Rienk |author3=Lamas, Gerardo |author4=Robbins, Robert K. |author5=Smith, Campbell |author6=Vane-Wright, Richard I. |date=28 July 2005 |work=Entomological Data Information System |publisher=Staatliches Museum für Naturkunde Stuttgart, Germany |accessdate=21 June 2013 |archive-date=9 September 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100909141739/http://www.insects-online.de/frames/papilio.htm |url-status=dead }}
| synonyms =
- Atrophaneura polyeuctes Doubleday, 1842
- Atrophaneura philoxenus Gray
}}
Byasa polyeuctes, the common windmill, is the most common member in India of the windmills genus (Byasa), comprising tailed black swallowtail butterflies with white spots and red submarginal crescents.
Range
File:Common windmill murree.jpg
This butterfly lives in Pakistan, northern ranges of India, Nepal, Bhutan, Myanmar, northern Thailand, Laos, Vietnam, southern China (including Yunnan) and Taiwan.
In India, the Himalayas from Himachal Pradesh to Sikkim, Assam onto Chinese South Tibet region and northern Myanmar.
Status
Overall, the butterfly is not rare. It is common in parts of Sikkim but becomes rarer westwards. It is extremely scarce in Shimla though not rare from Kangra.
In the west it ranges from the Azad Kashmir disputed territory part of the wider Kashmir region of Pakistan and India.
Description
Image:Atrophaneura polyeuctes.JPG
File:Close wing position of Byasa polyeuctes Doubleday, 1842 – Common Windmill WLB IMG 9310.jpg of common windmill found in Jayanti river bed, Buxa Tiger Reserve, West Bengal, India.]]
- Length 110 to 140 mm
- Sexes alike
- Black and white above with prominent swallowtail
- Red bodied - tail has a red tip
- Forewings completely black above and below
- Hindwings crenulated deeply twice on each side of swallowtail. Large oblong white discal spot in 5 (both upperside and underside) and sometimes in 4. Upperside hindwing has irregular marginal red crescents in 1a, 2 and 3 and a small white spot in 4.
Taxonomy
=Subspecies=
=Related species=
- The three common species of windmills can be recognised by the differences in shape, number and location of white spots.
- Rose windmill, Byasa latreillei, has a white discal band in 2, 3, 4 beyond the cell which is clearly trifurcated by black veins. A slightly smaller butterfly, the rose windmill has rose coloured lunules.
- Great windmill, Byasa dasarada, has a number of two white spots in 4, 5 on the upperside of the hindwing and three spots on 4, 5 and 6 on the underside of the hindwing. It is a slightly larger butterfly with a broader swallowtail.
- Other windmills are smaller, rarer and have small differentiating characters from the above three common windmills. See the individual articles for more information:
- de Nicéville's windmill (Byasa polla, de Nicéville)
- Nevill's windmill (Byasa nevilli, Wood-Mason)
- Black windmill (Byasa crassipes, Oberthür)
- Chinese windmill (Byasa plutonius, Oberthür), two subspecies of which occur in India.
Habitat
This butterfly prefers forests and woods. It frequents river valleys. It occurs at low elevations ({{convert|1000|to|5000|ft|m}}) in north east India but is found at higher altitudes in the western extent of its range – up to {{convert|11000|ft|m}} in Kashmir.
Habits
This butterfly has a leisurely flight high above, but is easily recognisable by the thin long forewings and hindwings. It is attracted to flowers and visits Clemanthe, Buddleia, Lantana and Rhododendron blossoms.
It is mimicked by a day flying moth Epicopa (or Epicopia) polydorus, which flies at the same period and over the same range as the common windmill and has much the same manner and habits.
Life cycle
This species has several broods where it finds suitable climate. It is seen on the wing between April and September. The imago has a foul odour.
Food plants
- Family Nepenthaceae
- Nepenthes species
- Family Aristolochiaceae
- Aristolochia griffithi
- Aristolochia shimadai
See also
References
{{Reflist}}
- {{cite book|last1=Collins |first1=N. Mark |last2=Morris |first2=Michael G. |title=Threatened Swallowtail Butterflies of the World: The IUCN Red Data Book |url=https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/98674#page/7/mode/1up |year=1985 |publisher=IUCN |location=Gland & Cambridge |isbn=978-2-88032-603-6 |via=Biodiversity Heritage Library}}
- {{cite book |last=Evans |first1=W.H. |authorlink=William Harry Evans |title=The Identification of Indian Butterflies |edition=2nd |location=Mumbai, India |publisher=Bombay Natural History Society |year=1932 }}
- {{cite book |last=Haribal |first=Meena |title=The Butterflies of Sikkim Himalaya and Their Natural History |location=Gangtok, Sikkim, India |publisher=Sikkim Nature Conservation Foundation |year=1992 }}
- {{cite book|last=Wynter-Blyth |first=Mark Alexander |authorlink=Mark Alexander Wynter-Blyth |title=Butterflies of the Indian Region |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=yEkgAQAAMAAJ |year=1957 |location=Bombay, India |publisher=Bombay Natural History Society |isbn=978-8170192329 }}
External links
{{Commons category|Atrophaneura polyeuctes}}
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20141208062921/http://globis.insects-online.de/species%26v%3D394 Global Butterfly Information System] text, images including holotypes of hostilius Fruhstorfer, 1908, lama Oberthür, 1876, letincius Fruhstorfer, 1908, punchi Bang-Haas, 1933, roseus Draeseke, 1923 and termessus Fruhstorfer, 1908
{{Red-bodied swallowtail|state=expanded}}
{{Taxonbar|from=Q13862105}}
Category:Butterflies of Indochina
Category:Butterflies described in 1842