The dorsal wing surfaces of papilionid butterflies of the nireus group are marked by bands of brilliant blue-green-colored cover scales. The thin, cuticular lower lamina of the scales acts as a blue reflector. The thick upper lamina forms a dense two-dimensional cuticular lattice of air cavities with a pigment acting as a long-pass optical filter. Reflectance spectra of small scale areas oscillate, but for large scale areas and the intact wing they are smooth. Theoretical modeling shows that the oscillations vanish for a scale ensemble with varying layer thicknesses and cavity dimensions. The scales combine in a subtle way structural and pigmentary coloration for an optical effect.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/OE.20.008877 | DOI Listing |
Neotrop Entomol
December 2023
Entomology Laboratory, Department of Zoology, University of Calcutta, Calcutta, West Bengal, India.
Butterflies have a wide spectrum of colour vision, and changes in flower colour influence both the visiting and nectaring (the act of feeding on flower nectar) events of them. However, the spontaneous behavioural response of butterflies while foraging on real flowers is less characterised in wild conditions. Hence, this study intends to investigate flower colour affinity in wild butterflies in relation to nectaring frequency (NF) and nectaring duration (ND).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElife
September 2023
Division of Science, Yale-NUS College, Singapore, Singapore.
The study of color patterns in the animal integument is a fundamental question in biology, with many lepidopteran species being exemplary models in this endeavor due to their relative simplicity and elegance. While significant advances have been made in unraveling the cellular and molecular basis of lepidopteran pigmentary coloration, the morphogenesis of wing scale nanostructures involved in structural color production is not well understood. Contemporary research on this topic largely focuses on a few nymphalid model taxa (e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe describe and illustrate four new subspecies of Papilionoidea butterflies which were collected from Phu Quoc Island, Kien Giang province, southern Vietnam between 2006 and 2017. These are papilionid Graphium antiphates matsui T. Saito & Vu subspec.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Exp Biol
May 2023
Groningen Institute for Evolutionary Life Science, University of Groningen, 9747AG Groningen, The Netherlands.
The wings of the purple spotted swallowtail Graphium weiskei are marked by an unusual bright colour pattern. Spectrophotometry on G. weiskei wings demonstrated the presence of a pigment with an absorption spectrum (peak wavelength λmax=676 nm) similar to that of the bile pigment sarpedobilin in the wings of the congeneric Graphium sarpedon (λmax=672 nm).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInsects
February 2023
Research Center for Integrative Evolutionary Science, Sokendai-Hayama, The Graduate University for Advanced Studies, SOKENDAI, Hayama 240-0193, Japan.
The light reflected by the dorsal side of butterfly wings often functions as a signal for, e.g., mate choice, thermoregulation, and/or predator deterrence, while the ventral wing reflections are generally used for crypsis and camouflage.
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