Papilio bonhotei = Papilio andraemon bonhotei (Bahaman swallowtail) Fig. 1. Papilio bonhotei, male
Fig. 1a. Underside of the same
Fig. 1b. Papilio bonhotei, female
Fig. 1c. Underside of the same
Emily Mary Sharpe. 1900. On a collection of butterflies from the Bahamas. Zool. Soc. London Proc. 1900: 197-203. plate 19 Papilio andraemon bonhotei Sharpe, 1900
Date 1900
Source https://archive.org/stream/proceedingsofgen00scie#page/203/mode/1up
Author Horace Knight
Source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Proc._zool._Soc._Lond._1900_plate_19.jpg
The Bahaman swallowtail butterfly (Papilio andraemon) is a species of swallowtail butterflies found in the Bahamas, Cuba, Jamaica, and the Cayman Islands. The wingspan of Papilio andraemon is about 10 cm long. The butterfly has a black color on the obverse side of its wings, with a pale yellow band and a thin band of the same color in the wing cell. The hindwings are extended by long thin tails slightly widened at the tip and bear a pale yellow band which extends that of the forewing, submarginal yellow and orange lunules, a brick red ocellus surmounted by an iridescent blue lunule in the anal angle and diffuse iridescent blue lunules in the submarginal part. On the reverse, the wings bear the same patterns in lighter colors, the submarginal blue lunules are more numerous and more marked, the hind wings also bear a reddish macula in the submarginal part.
Order: Lepidoptera
Family: Papilionidae
Genus: Papilio
Species: Papilio andraemon (Hübner, [1823])
Synonyms
- Heraclides andraemon Hübner, [1823]