Dear Keith
Thanks for the valuable informations

Balakrishnan Valappil
Civil Engineering Consultant
NEST
Malappuram PO
676505
KERALA

Mobile:09446587033
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--- On Fri, 2/6/09, Keith Wolfe <[email protected]> wrote:

From: Keith Wolfe <[email protected]>
Subject: Fwd: [ButterflyIndia] COMMON ROSE(Pachliopta aristolochiae) laying 
eggs on a Sapotaceae plant
To: [email protected]
Date: Friday, February 6, 2009, 4:22 PM







I suspect this is normal behavior, just rarely witnessed (http://sdnp. 
nic.in/thematica reas/biodiv/ subresources/ ovipositonmistak en-butterflies. 
html).  Such "mistakes" and "confusion" are a human perception, and in simple 
terms, may in fact be an important part of how female butterflies perpetuate 
their species by occasionally spreading the "risk" to plants that have a 
similar (to them) chemistry.  Thus, ovipositing mistakes are probably the raw 
material for the eventual colonization, adaptation, and shift to novel hosts 
(successfully or not), which are key components of insect evolution.

Best wishes,

Keith

From: balakrishnan valappil <balakrishnan_ valappil@ yahoo.com>
To: butterfly india <butterflyindia@ yahoogroups. com>
Sent: Thu, 5 Feb 2009 09:08:00 +0000 (UTC)
Subject: [ButterflyIndia] COMMON ROSE(Pachliopta aristolochiae) laying eggs on 
a Sapotaceae plant

Hi friends

attached is the egg laying of a common rose  on a plant
identified as Madhuca longifolia,Sapotace ae
my doubts are
Is it a recorded foodplant of Common Rose?
Is there any practice of laying eggs on nonfoodplants if host plants are 
unavailable?
(and in this case host plants (Aristolochiaceae) were available at the 
particular location
 but away from the Sapotaceae plant)

Balakrishnan Valappil















      
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