Myrmecophily in Lycaenidae butterflies (Rhopalocera, Lepidoptera) of Kerala, Western Ghats, Southern India

Documentation of myrmecophily in Lycaenidae butterflies of the Western Ghats in Kerala state, Peninsular India is attempted. Of the 94 lycaenid species hitherto recorded to occur in Kerala, we reared 67 species. Based on larval rearing and literature review, we found that 55.3% of lycaenids in the s...

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Published inOriental insects Vol. 58; no. 1; pp. 74 - 99
Main Authors Sujitha, Prabhakaran Chandrika, Sadasivan, Kalesh, Nair, Vinayan Padmanabhan, Kripakaran, Manoj, Prasad, Gopalan
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Taylor & Francis 02.01.2024
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Summary:Documentation of myrmecophily in Lycaenidae butterflies of the Western Ghats in Kerala state, Peninsular India is attempted. Of the 94 lycaenid species hitherto recorded to occur in Kerala, we reared 67 species. Based on larval rearing and literature review, we found that 55.3% of lycaenids in the state were myrmecophilous, 19.1% were myrmecoxenous, and 25.5% were data deficient. Eight species of lycaenids, previously unrecorded as myrmecophilous, were confirmed to be myrmecophilous, and seven species of ants were newly detected to be lycaenophilous. Twenty-two interactions had a hitherto unrecorded ant genus, and 42 involved an unreported ant species. A little less than one-fifth of the studied unique interactions were obligatory. Obligatory interaction was highest in the lycaenid Cigaritis Donzel, 1847, followed by Anthene Doubleday, 1847, Arhopala Boisduval, 1832, Catapaecilma Butler, 1879, and Zesius Hübner, 1819. Amongst butterflies, the highest number of ant associations was observed for Jamides celeno celeno (Cramer, [1775]) and Thaduka multicaudata kanara Evans, 1925. Native ants dominated the interactions (77.1% vs. 22.9%). Amongst the ants, Crematogaster Lund, 1831, dominated the unique interactions followed by Anoplolepis Santschi, 1914 and Camponotus Mayr, 1861. Invasive ants attending butterflies strictly endemic to the Western Ghats were not observed.
ISSN:0030-5316
2157-8745
DOI:10.1080/00305316.2023.2228299