Acraea Serena
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''Acraea serena'', the dancing acraea, is a
butterfly Butterflies are insects in the macrolepidopteran clade Rhopalocera from the order Lepidoptera, which also includes moths. Adult butterflies have large, often brightly coloured wings, and conspicuous, fluttering flight. The group comprise ...
of the family
Nymphalidae The Nymphalidae are the largest family of butterflies, with more than 6,000 species distributed throughout most of the world. Belonging to the superfamily Papilionoidea, they are usually medium-sized to large butterflies. Most species have a red ...
. It is found throughout Africa south of the Sahara. It is the most common of the ''Acraea'', from Dakar to Fort-Dauphin and from Yemen to the Cape. This is the
type species In zoological nomenclature, a type species (''species typica'') is the species name with which the name of a genus or subgenus is considered to be permanently taxonomically associated, i.e., the species that contains the biological type specime ...
of the old genus ''Telchinia'', which may warrant re-separation from '' Acraea''. Formerly, ''A. serena'' was often misidentified as ''
Acraea eponina __NOTOC__ ''Acraea eponina'', the orange acraea or small orange acraea to distinguish it from the larger '' A. anacreon'', is a butterfly of the family Nymphalidae. It is found in tropical Africa and south-western Arabia. The wingspan is 35–4 ...
'' (small orange acraea) or ''
Acraea terpsicore Acraea (Ancient Greek: means 'of the heights' from ''akraios'') was a name that had several uses in Greek and Roman mythology. *Acraea, the naiad daughter of the river-god Asterion near Mycenae, who together with her sisters Euboea and Prosymna ...
'' (tawny coaster). It is very likely that the butterfly's black-spotted orange markings are a sign of unpalatability and it may well form part of a mimicry ring with '' Erikssonia edgei''.


Taxonomy of ''Acraea manjaca'' Boisduval

''Acraea manjaca'' from Madagascar, now considered to be conspecific with ''Acraea serena'', has a complex taxonomic history which illustrates the problems in interpreting the genus as a whole. Here is an account of how ''Acraea manjaca'' was placed by different authors. Boisduval notes the proximity with ''eponina'' Cramer in his original description of 1833. Doubleday (1848) treats ''manjaca'' as a good species (1848) but Guerin (1849) places ''manjaca'' in synonymy with ''serena'' Fabricius, which was confirmed by Trimen (1862) and Mabille (1886). Aurivillius (1898) considers that ''manjaca'' Boisduval is a variety of Fabricius' ''serena'' which had, in turn, been put in synonymy with ''terpsicore'' Linnaeus by Butler (1894), and which then was thought to be '' eponina'' Cramer ( Le Doux, 1928, Carcasson, 1961). Eltringham (1912, 1916) considers ''manjaca'' Boisduval to be a synonym of ''rougeti'' Guérin (''Acraea serena''). Le Doux (1928) reinstated ''manjaca'' as good subspecies of ''eponina''. Van Son (1963) considers ''manjaca'' to be a simple form. Small orange acraea (Acraea serena serena) male.jpg, Male ''A. s. serena''
Gambia Small orange acraea (Acraea serena serena) male 2.jpg, Male ''A. s. serena''
Gambia Small orange acraea (Acraea serena serena) male underside.jpg, Male ''A. s. serena''
Gambia Small orange acraea (Acraea serena serena) female underside.jpg, Female ''A. s. serena''
Gambia


Description in Seitz

"''A. terpsichore''" misident. ''A. serena'' is a common species and very variable, especially in the female; it occurs everywhere in the region except in Arabia and forms some not quite sharply defined races. In the type-form the sexes are quite similar and above coloured and marked almost exactly as in '' ventura'' (56 a); the subapical band of the forewing is completely separated from the red-yellow basal half and is red-yellow or sometimes in the female whitish; both wings above and beneath with distinct yellow marginal spots; the basal area of the hindwing beneath without red streaks or only in 1 c and the cell with a red streak between the black dots; the marginal band always without red stripes on the interneural folds. In female-ab. ''janisca'' Godt. (the females 56 a are transitional to ''janisca'') the red-yellow colour is replaced by dark grey and the subapical band of the forewing is usually white. - ''subserena'' Smith is similar to the form ''buxtoni''; both wings above with sharply defined, deep black marginal bands, which on the forewing are unicolorous but on the hindwing have small light marginal spots; fore wing beneath with sharply defined, light-spotted, black marginal band; hindwing beneath with a few black dots in the basal part and with sharply defined black, light-spotted marginal band; subapical band of the forewing completely united with the basal area, en closing a quadrate black spot at the end of the cell. Sierra Leone. - ''rougeti'' Guer. (= ''eliana'' Strand) has like the type-form, large light marginal spots on both wings above, but differs in the forewing having beneath at the distal margin only sharply prominent black vein-ends and no proximally defined light marginal spots, the light ground-colour reaching the distal margin between the veins without interruption; the light subapical band of the forewing is sometimes separate, sometimes united with the light basal part; basally straight and cut off almost vertically to the costal margin. Was described from specimens from Abyssinia, but occurs almost identically also in South and East Africa and on Madagascar. Females with almost transparent, whitish ground-colour on both wings may be called female-ab. ''manjaca'' Bdv. They occur especially on Madagascar - ''buxtoni'' Btlr. (56 a, as ''rougeti'') closely approximates to ''rougeti'', only differing in having the light marginal spots on the upperside of the forewing smaller or indistinct and the marginal band of the forewing deeper black and irregularly defined proximally; the subapical band of the forewing joined to the light basal half at vein 4. South and East Africa. In ab. ''melas'' Oberth. the wings are unicolorous black with an irregular white spot instead of the subapical band of the forewing and beneath only relieved with yellowish at the distal margin and at the base. - ab. ''connexa'' Thur. has the distal black dot in the cell of the hindwing joined to the median dots. German East Africa. - ab. ''excentrica'' Thur. differs in having discal dots 3 to 6 on the underside of the hindwing placed much nearer to the distal margin than usual, elongated and sometimes almost reaching the marginal band. German East Africa. - ab. ''toka'' Strand closely approximates to typical ''rougeti'', only differing materially in having the proximal boundary-line of the marginal band on the underside of the hindwing black instead of reddish. Abyssinia. - ab. ''intermediana'' Strand is another nearly allied aberration to ''rougeti'', distinguished by the strong development of the red basal streak and the somewhat broader marginal band on the hindwing beneath. German East Africa. How Strand, who has access to the extensive material of the Berlin Museum, could regard ''intermediana'' and ''eliana'' (''rougeti'' ) as independent species, is difficult to explain, as they obviously intergrade without sharp delimitation into the other terpsichore forms and are only characterized by trifling differences. - ab. ''contraria'' Strand is described as follows: "The red spots in the marginal band on the upper surface of both wings are only quite weakly indicated, hence at a cursory glance the band appears unicolorous; on the underside of the hindwing some of the black spots in the basal area are smaller, namely those of the distal and inner-marginal rows, and in addition the distal round spot in the cell is so small as to be almost obsolete. In the distal transverse row only 5 spots are present, namely those in cellules 1 b, 1 c, 2, 4 and 7, of which the one in cellule 4 is punctiform. The bordering of the black marginal spots is so broad that the black interspaces are as broad, as the spots themselves. Beyond the black transverse spot on the underside of the forewing, which as usual is confluent with the costal margin, there is no further, smaller, black spot". German East Africa. Evidently an extreme aberration of ''buxtoni''. - ab. ''venturina'' Thur. forms a transition to the following race; the underside of the hindwing has between the basal and discal dots red streaks in 1 c, 7 and in the cell; the marginal band is, however of uniform breadth with marginal spots of almost equal size, which at their proximal end have at most a reddish dot or spot. Uganda.


Taxonomy

It is a member of the '' Acraea bonasia''
species group In biology, a species complex is a group of closely related organisms that are so similar in appearance and other features that the boundaries between them are often unclear. The taxa in the complex may be able to hybridize readily with each oth ...
. Pierre & Bernaud, 2014 *''Acraea'' (''Actinote'') groupe ''serena'' sub group '' bonasia'' Pierre & Bernaud, 2014 Pierre & Bernau, 2014 Classification et Liste Synonymique des Taxons du Genre ''Acraea'
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References


External links


Acraea manjaca
at Le Site des Acraea de Dominique Bernaud
Images representing ''Acraea serena''
at Bold.
''Die Gross-Schmetterlinge der Erde'' 13: Die Afrikanischen Tagfalter. Plate XIII 56
''a'' var. ''rougeti''

at Pteron Butterflies described in 1775 serena Endemic butterflies of South Africa Taxa named by Johan Christian Fabricius Taxobox binomials not recognized by IUCN {{Heliconiinae-stub