David, that is great news! Please ask your friends to post images, and perhaps 
even consider contributing them to the website. Those would be very useful spot 
records.

Krushnamegh.
________________________________
From: David Raju <[email protected]>
Reply-To: butterflyindia <[email protected]>
Date: Sun, 13 Feb 2011 08:34:05 -0500
To: butterflyindia <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [ButterflyIndia] Four Western Ghats endemics, and the Palghat Gap

Dear Krushnamegh,
Its really interesting..Two of my frined,Anzil have photographed Nilgiri four 
ring from Neyyar &
Toms had photographed this from Wagamon also. will tell them to post the pics 
soon.
Its look very similar to what we photographed in Upper Bhavani!.
Warm Regards
David
On Sat, Feb 12, 2011 at 10:02 PM, Kunte, Krushnamegh <[email protected]> 
wrote:

Some of you may know that the Palghat Gap in the Western Ghats is a major 
biogeographic barrier that separates many high-elevation shola forest-montane 
grassland endemics to its north (Nilgiris-Coorg) and south (Anamalais 
southward). Here are two such endemic species pairs from the butterfly world: 
the Red-eye Bushbrown (Heteropsis adolphei) and the Nilgiri Four-ring (Ypthima 
chenui) are endemic to the Nilgiris and Coorg:

http://ifoundbutterflies.net/444-mycalesis/heteropsis-adolphei

http://ifoundbutterflies.net/453-ypthima/ypthima-chenui

and the Red-disc Bushbrown (Heteropsis oculus) and the Palni Four-ring (Ypthima 
ypthimoides) are endemic to the Anamalais and hill ranges south of it:

http://ifoundbutterflies.net/444-mycalesis/heteropsis-oculus

http://ifoundbutterflies.net/453-ypthima/ypthima-ypthimoides

Note that the two Bushbrowns above were until recently included under 
Mycalesis. The move from Mycalesis to Heteropsis is based on the work of our 
very own Ullasa:

Kodandaramaiah, U., D. C. Lees, C. J. Müller, E. Torres, K. P. Karanth and N. 
Wahlberg. 2010. Phylogenetics and biogeography of a spectacular Old World 
radiation of butterflies: the subtribe Mycalesina (Lepidoptera: Nymphalidae: 
Satyrini). BMC Evolutionary Biology, 10:172.

Abstract at:

http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2148/10/172

Two further notes: (1) Susanth has recently shown me picture of the Nilgiri 
Four-ring taken at Ponmudi (near Thiruvananthapuram), south of the Palghat Gap. 
The matter of how that specimen got there needs to be settled. And Susanth, are 
you absolutely sure about the locality? (2) Another of Susanth’s picture used 
as that of the Nilgiri Four-ring in Isaac Kehimkar’s book is actually a Palni 
Four-ring. So make a note if you use that book for identification.

With best wishes,

Krushnamegh.
-------------------------------------------------

Krushnamegh Kunte, PhD

Post-doctoral Research Fellow
FAS Center for Systems Biology, Harvard University
52 Oxford St., Northwest Lab Room 458.40-3
Cambridge, MA 02138, USA.

Ph: (617) 496-0078, Cell: (512) 577-1370, Fax: (617) 495-2196
Email: [email protected] <http://[email protected]>
Other emails: [email protected] <http://[email protected]> , 
[email protected] <http://[email protected]>

Personal website: http://www.people.fas.harvard.edu/~kunte/index.htm
Indian Foundation for Butterflies: http://ifoundbutterflies.org/
Google profile: http://www.google.com/profiles/krushnamegh





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