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Asterocampa celtis

Asterocampa celtis, male

Superregnum: Eukaryota
Cladus: Unikonta
Cladus: Opisthokonta
Cladus: Holozoa
Regnum: Animalia
Subregnum: Eumetazoa
Cladus: Bilateria
Cladus: Nephrozoa
Cladus: Protostomia
Cladus: Ecdysozoa
Cladus: Panarthropoda
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Hexapoda
Classis: Insecta
Cladus: Dicondylia
Subclassis: Pterygota
Cladus: Metapterygota
Infraclassis: Neoptera
Cladus: Eumetabola
Cladus: Endopterygota
Superordo: Panorpida
Cladus: Amphiesmenoptera
Ordo: Lepidoptera
Subordo: Glossata
Cladus: Coelolepida
Cladus: Myoglossata
Cladus: Neolepidoptera
Infraordo: Heteroneura
Cladus: Eulepidoptera
Cladus: Ditrysia
Cladus: Apoditrysia
Cladus: Obtectomera
Superfamilia: Papilionoidea

Familia: Nymphalidae
Subfamilia: Apaturinae
Genus: Asterocampa
Species: Asterocampa celtis
Subspecies: A. c. antonia – A. c. celtis – A. c. reinthali
Name

Asterocampa celtis (Boisduval & Leconte, 1835)

Type locality: Georgia.
Synonyms

Apatura celtis Boisduval & Leconte, 1835
Apatura celtis ab. alb. Strecker, 1878, Synon. Cat. Macrolep.: 145 (inv.), TL: Coalburg, West Virginia.
Apatura celtis alba Wright, 1905, Butts. West Coast: 58
Chlorippe celtis var. inornata Wolcott, 1916, Ent. News, 27: (97-99).

Asterocampa celtis

References

Boisduval & Leconte, 1835, Hist. Lép. Am. Sept. (23-26): 210, (11-22): pl. 57 (1835), f. 1-4
Friedlander, 1987, J. Res. Lep. 25 (4): 215–338.
Gatrelle, R.R. 1999b. A comment on Friedlander’s Asterocampa (Nymphalidae, Apaturinae): designation of neotypes for A. celtis and A. clyton. The Taxonomic Report 1(5): 1–6. Full article (PDF). Reference page.

Vernacular names
English: Hackberry Emperor

Asterocampa celtis, the hackberry emperor, is a North American butterfly that belongs to the brushfooted butterfly family, Nymphalidae.[2] It gets its name from the hackberry tree (Celtis occidentalis and others in the genus Celtis) upon which it lays its eggs. The hackberry tree is the only host plant for A. celtis and is the food source for larvae.

The hackberry emperor is known for being a quick, mercurial butterfly. It often is found along water sources and lowlands, although it lives in a broad range of habitats. Another notable characteristic is that it rarely is spotted visiting a flower, which is considered unusual for a butterfly.[3]

Species in the genus Asterocampa are regarded as being "cheater" organisms, since these butterflies do not pollinate flowers when they feed from them. This species can more accurately be described as parasitizing their hosts and plant food sources since they extract nutrients without providing any benefits to the host.[4]

As a member of the family Nymphalidae, the hackberry emperor oviposits its eggs in clutches, or clusters, upon hackberry leaves. There are a few plausible evolutionary reasons for this behavior, but the exact cause for this species' behavior is contentious. Possible explanations include higher fecundity that may be aided by aposematic coloration.[5]

Geographic range

The hackberry emperor is found across a wide range within North America. It has been observed as far south as central Mexico and north into parts of Eastern Canada. Its range extends to the southwest into regions like Arizona, New Mexico, and other parts of the Rockies, as shown by the map. It can commonly be found across the Midwest and especially along the east coast from Florida up to New England.[3][6]
Habitat

Asterocampa celtis lives wherever the hackberry tree lives. There are a variety of species of the hackberry line, and A. celtis is not found preferentially on any one kind of hackberry. More specifically, the butterfly lives in cities, forests, and wooded areas, and especially prefers areas near rivers or other bodies of water. The species is not very deterred by human development. Furthermore, the hackberry emperor may be seen near woodland edges, near creeks, around buildings, and around damp, muddy areas.[6]
Food resources
Caterpillar

The larvae of A. celtis feed upon the leaves and leaf buds of hackberry trees. They must first climb back up their host tree to eat after they are done hibernating over winter. The caterpillars have been known to eat so much at a time that they can completely defoliate a tree.[3][7]
Adults
Leaves of a hackberry tree

Adults feed on a variety of food sources. They seldom make visitations to flowers so nectar is not a primary food source. Instead, they commonly eat hackberry sap, feces, dead animals including decaying pigs, snakes, and dogs, and old fruit.[8] They drink from water in puddles. Also, they are known to land on humans to lick off their sweat to gain sodium.[3][6]
Parental care
Oviposition

A. celtis usually lays eggs in clusters on the underside of hackberry leaves, although it has been observed to occasionally lay eggs on the top of a leaf. Laying eggs in clusters results in higher fecundity for the female. Some factors influencing oviposition could be that laying eggs in a large cluster decreases the time and energy necessary for searching for new leaf sites, which decrease the risk of maternal death between oviposition events. For A. celtis, laying eggs in clusters is its best strategy to produce the most offspring.[5][7]
Life history
Egg

The pale eggs are laid in clusters of 5-20 eggs on the host plant.[9] Eggs look white with a faint green-yellow hue.
Larva

The body is approximately 1.4" long. The head has brown-black colored dorsal horns. The body is a primarily green with whitish-yellow chalazae, or bumps. At the rear, two sharp tails protrude outwards level with the abdomen.

Half-grown larvae hibernate over the winter in fallen hackberry leaves along the forest floor. In the spring, they emerge again and climb back up the hackberry tree to eat the foliage.[3][7]
Pupa

Pupae have a dark green color with white spots all around the body. There are also white lines going diagonally across the abdomen.[3]

Pupae are found on the underside of hackberry leaves and metamorphose into adults in the early summer.[7]
Adult

A. celtis adults exhibit sexual dimorphism. Males have smaller, darker bodies and more slender wings than females. Both males and females are light brown with a row of black or white dots near the far edge of their wings. White spots near the front of the wing help distinguish it from a similar butterfly, the Tawny Emperor.[3][6]

Adult hackberry emperors lay two broods in a year. This production of multiple generations within one year makes it such that all life stages may be present at one time within a single site or host tree.[7]
Parasitism

A. celtis visits flowers in an unusual way. On the rare occasion that the butterfly visits flowers for feeding, it does not allow its feet or its antennae to touch the flower. Only the proboscis is used to touch parts of the flower, which suggests that the butterfly would be an ineffective pollinator. This is considered to be “cheater” behavior. Typically, the specialized relationship of flowering plants and butterflies results in mutual benefit, in that the butterfly gains nutrients from flower visits while the host plant gains reproductive fitness from assistance in pollination. However, the hackberry emperor likely does not aid in pollination in any significant way.[4]
Enemies
Predators

Generalist species like birds and mammals, such as bears and raccoons, will eat larvae that lie along the forest floor. The stink bug is also a very common predator of hackberry emperor eggs.[6][10]
Parasites

Scelionid egg parasites antagonize many species of Asterocampa, including the hackberry emperor. A tachinid fly parasitoid, Chetogena edwardsii, is another common threat to the hackberry emperor.[10]
Mating behavior

Male searching behavior in butterflies generally falls into two different strategies. One strategy is to actively patrol an area for females. Patrollers are attracted to still objects that resemble a mate. The other strategy is to perch. Perchers typically spend only part of the day actively looking for a mate. They sit perched upon a branch waiting for a female to fly by. When a male sees movement nearby it will quickly fly out to attempt to mate, but stay within a limited habitat.[11]

A. celtis exhibit perching behavior. The male rests on rocks, trees, or fallen branches often along streams from the afternoon until around sundown.[11]
Conservation

The hackberry emperor is not under serious threat. It can commonly be found throughout most of its distribution.[12]
References

"NatureServe Explorer 2.0 Asterocampa celtis Hackberry Emperor". explorer.natureserve.org. Retrieved 1 October 2020.
Distribution
"hackberry emperor - Asterocampa celtis (Boisduval & Leconte)". entnemdept.ufl.edu. Retrieved 2017-10-24.
Neck, Raymond W. (1983). "SIGNIFICANCE OF VISITS BY HACKBERRY BUTTERFLIES (NYMPHALIDAE: ASTEROCAMPA) TO FLOWERS" (PDF). Journal of the Lepidopterists' Society. 37 (4): 269–274.
Courtney, Steven P. (February 1984). "The Evolution of Egg Clustering by Butterflies and Other Insects". The American Naturalist. 123 (2): 276–281. doi:10.1086/284202. JSTOR 2461038. S2CID 84193538.
"Hackberry Emperor". MDC Discover Nature. Retrieved 2017-10-24.
Langlois, Thomas H. and, Langlois, Marina H. (January 1964). "NOTES ON THE LIFE-HISTORY OF THE HACKBERRY BUTTERFLY, ASTEROCAMPA CELTIS (BDVL. & LEC.) ON SOUTH BASS ISLAND, LAKE ERIE". The Ohio Journal of Science. 64. hdl:1811/4971.
Payne, J.A. & King, E.W. (1969). "Lepidoptera associated with pig carrion" (PDF). Journal of the Lepidopterists' Society. 23: 191–195.
Stamp, Nancy E. (1980-03-01). "Egg Deposition Patterns in Butterflies: Why Do Some Species Cluster Their Eggs Rather Than Deposit Them Singly?". The American Naturalist. 115 (3): 367–380. doi:10.1086/283567. ISSN 0003-0147. S2CID 83926042.
Friedlander, Timothy P. (1984). "General Notes: INSECT PARASITES AND PREDATORS OF HACKBERRY BUTTERFLIES (NYMPHALIDAE: ASTEROCAMPA)" (PDF). Journal of the Lepidopterists' Society. 38: 60–61.
Scott, James A. (1975). "Mate-locating behavior of western North American butterflies" (PDF). Journal of Research on the Lepidoptera. 14: 1–40. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-10-26. Retrieved 2017-10-26.
"Hackberry Emperor Asterocampa celtis (Boisduval & Leconte, [1835]) | Butterflies and Moths of North America". www.butterfliesandmoths.org. Retrieved 2017-12-01.

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