Heteronympha cordace explained

Heteronympha cordace, the bright-eyed brown, is a brown colored butterfly endemic to Australia. It was described by Carl Geyer in 1832.

Description

Heteronympha cordace has a wingspan ranging from NaNmm, with females generally larger than males and with stouter abdomens.[1] The uppersides of the wings are black to dark brown with orange to brownish-orange markings. The markings contain a blue-centered black subapical eyespot and a larger blue-centered black subtornal eyespot.[2] The underside of the wings are lighter in hue and have more extensive orange areas.[3]

Range

The Heteronympha cordace butterfly occurs in disjunct populations across Australia, in New South Wales, southern Victoria, south eastern South Australia, and Tasmania. Populations of the butterfly are known from swampy areas in the alpine of the Great Divide to coastal areas in both the east and west. It is not common in any areas and colonies tend to be static, and many populations have become extinct as a result of habitat loss.[3]

Ecology

Adult butterflies have a slow, meandering flight pattern close to the ground among the larval host plants, and near food plants Melaleuca and Leptospermum that grow near the breeding habitat. One generation is completed annually, with adults occurring mainly from late December to February.

It is fond of sedgeland and low shrubland in swamps and along creeks, often with dense stands of the larval food plant. It occurs mostly at altitudes from NaNm (-2,147,483,648feet) but can occur as low as sea level in Tasmania.

The larval food plant of Heteronympha cordace is Carex appressa. The female butterfly lays a single egg or very few on the underside of the lower leaves of Carex appressa. The eggs are 0.8mm in diameter, green, nearly spherical, and have thin longitudinal ribs. The larva is green to greenish brown and generally 25mm long. The larva has a darker middorsal line with paler dorsolateral and lateral lines. The head of the larva is slightly concave and reddish brown to mottled brown.[4] The pupa of the butterfly is green with greenish-yellow wings, and about 14mm long. Pupation occurs either on a low leaf of a host plant or nearby a host plant, and the pupa is suspended with its head downwards by the cremaster.

Subspecies

Notes and References

  1. Book: The Complete Field Guide to Butterflies of Australia . Michael Braby . Csiro Publishing . 2016 . 978-1-4863-0101-0 . 218.
  2. Book: Butterflies of Australia: Their Identification, Biology and Distribution . Michael F Braby . Csiro Publishing . 2000 . 978-0-643-10292-7.
  3. Book: Butterflies: Identification and Life History . Ross Field . revised . Museum Victoria . 2013 . 978-1-921833-32-8 . 188.
  4. Book: Lepidoptera: Hesperioidea, Papilionoidea . E. D. Edwards . J. Newland . L. Regan . illustrated . Csiro Publishing. 2001 . 978-0-643-06700-4.