Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Papilio paris

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Kingdom
  
Order
  
Genus
  
Higher classification
  
Papilio

Phylum
  
Family
  
Papilionidae

Scientific name
  
Papilio paris

Rank
  
Species

Papilio paris Papilio paris gedeensis

Similar
  
Butterfly, Papilio, Swallowtail butterfly, Insect, Butterflies and moths

Paris peacock papilio paris butterfly


Papilio paris, the Paris peacock, is a species of swallowtail butterfly found in the Indian subcontinent and Southeast Asia.

Contents

Papilio paris Papilio paris All downhill from here

Beautiful butterfly papilio paris paris peacock


Subspecies

Papilio paris httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

  • P. p. arjuna Horsfield, 1828 (central Java)
  • P. p. battacorum Rothschild, 1908 (north-eastern Sumatra)
  • P. p. chinensis Rothschild, 1895 (western China)
  • P. p. gedeensis Fruhstorfer, 1893 (western Java)
  • P. p. hermosanus Rebel, 1906 (central Taiwan, southern Taiwan)
  • P. p. nakaharai Shirôzu, 1960 (northern Taiwan)
  • P. p. paris Linnaeus, 1758 (north-western India, south-western China, northern Thailand, Vietnam, southern Burma)
  • P. p. tamilana Linnaeus, 1758 — Tamil peacock — (southern India)
  • P. p. tenggerensis Fruhstorfer, 1893 (eastern Java)
  • Male

    Papilio paris Papilio paris Wikipedia

    Upperwings are black and irrorated (sprinkled) with dark green scales, which on the outer portion of the forewing coalesce and form an incomplete postdiscal narrow band which is straighter than the similar subterminal band on the forewing of Papilio polyctor.

    Papilio paris ButterflyCornernet Papilio paris Paris Peacock Voilier lustr

    On the hindwing, the irroration of dark green scales does not extend to the costal margin and is interrupted posteriorly by a broad postdiscal area, on both sides of which the green scales coalesce to form narrow diffuse bands; a conspicuous upper discal shining blue patch occupies the base of interspace 4 and outer portions of interspaces 5 and 6; this patch is variable in size, and in many specimens extends narrowly below and above the interspaces 3 and 7, respectively, its outer margin is uneven, its inner margin evenly arched; a prominent claret-red largely black-centred eyespots at the tornal angle, its inner margin with a transverse short violet-blue superposed line; in many specimens an obscure claret-red subterminal lunule in interspace 7.

    Papilio paris Papilio paris Linnaeus 1758 Checklist View

    Underside opaque black; bases of both forewings and hindwings, up to basal half of cell in forewing and up to apex of cell in hindwing, with an irroration of yellowish scales; also present more obscurely on the subterminal area in both wings. Forewing with a very broad elongate triangular pale area that does not extend to the termen, formed of internervular broad very pale ochraceous-white streaks, short near the tornus, gradually longer up to the costa. Hindwing: a prominent subterminal series of ochraceous-red lunules traversed by short violet-blue lines; in interspaces 1,2 and sometimes in 3, these lunules are formed into more or less complete largely black centred eyespots by the addition of an admarginal portion of the red ring. Cilia conspicuously white in the interspaces. Antennae, head, thorax and abdomen black, the latter three sprinkled with green scales above.

    Female

    Papilio paris Papilio paris Linnaeus 1758 Checklist View

    Similar to the male but somewhat paler and duller. Upperside of the forewing has the green postdiscal band shorter and more incomplete than in the male. Hindwing with the upper discal patch smaller, often green and not blue, the red subterminal lunule in interspace 7 is always present and more prominent than in the male.

    Papilio paris Papilio paris Paris Peacock Butterflies of India

    Underside of wings similar to that in the male, but the tornal and subtornal markings generally formed into more or less complete eyespots.

    Wingspan: 106–132 mm

    Distribution

    The Himalayas from Kumaon to Sikkim, Nepal and Bhutan; the hills of Assam, Burma and Tenasserim, extending to Thailand and the Malay Peninsula. A common insect in Sikkim, where it is found from the Terai up to 5,000 feet (1,500 m). It is rare in Burma and Tenasserim. It also occurs in some parts of the Western Ghats, such as the Chikmaglure b.b.hill ranges.

    Other reading

  • Erich Bauer and Thomas Frankenbach, 1998 Schmetterlinge der Erde, Butterflies of the World Part I (1), Papilionidae Papilionidae I: Papilio, Subgenus Achillides, Bhutanitis, Teinopalpus. Edited by Erich Bauer and Thomas Frankenbach. Keltern: Goecke & Evers; Canterbury: Hillside Books, ISBN 9783931374624
  • References

    Papilio paris Wikipedia