Butterflies (Lepidoptera) of the Kameng Protected Area Complex, Western Arunachal Pradesh, India
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OPEN ACCESS All articles published in the Journal of Threatened Taxa are registered under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Interna- tional License unless otherwise mentioned. JoTT allows unrestricted use of articles in any medium, reproduction and distribution by providing adequate credit to the authors and the source of publication. Journal of Threatened Taxa The international journal of conservation and taxonomy www.threatenedtaxa.org ISSN 0974-7907 (Online) | ISSN 0974-7893 (Print) Monograph Butterflies (Lepidoptera) of the Kameng Protected Area Complex, western Arunachal Pradesh, India Sanjay Sondhi & Krushnamegh Kunte 13 August 2016 | Vol. 8 | No. 8 | Pp. 9053-9124 10.11609/jott.2984.8.8.9053-9124 For Focus, Scope, Aims, Policies and Guidelines visit http://threatenedtaxa.org/About_JoTT.asp For Article Submission Guidelines visit http://threatenedtaxa.org/Submission_Guidelines.asp For Policies against Scientific Misconduct visit http://threatenedtaxa.org/JoTT_Policy_against_Scientific_Misconduct.asp For reprints contact <[email protected]> Publisher/Host Partner Threatened Taxa Journal of Threatened Taxa | www.threatenedtaxa.org | 13 August 2016 | 8(8): 9053–9124 Butterflies (Lepidoptera) of the Kameng Protected Area Monograph Complex, western Arunachal Pradesh, India Sanjay Sondhi 1 & Krushnamegh Kunte 2 ISSN 0974-7907 (Online) ISSN 0974-7893 (Print) 1 Titli Trust, 49 Rajpur Road Enclave, Dhoran Khas, near IT Park, P.O. Gujrada, Dehradun, Uttarakhand 248001, India 1,2 Indian Foundation for Butterflies. C-703, Alpine Pyramid, Rajiv Gandhi Nagar, Bengaluru Karnataka 560097, India OPEN ACCESS 2 National Centre for Biological Sciences (NCBS), Tata Institute of Fundamental Research (TIFR), GKVK, Bellary Road, Bengaluru, Karnataka 560065, India 1 [email protected] (corresponding author), 2 [email protected] Abstract: The butterflies of the Kameng Protected Area Complex in western Arunachal Pradesh, India, covering the protected areas of Eaglenest Wildlife Sanctuary, Pakke Tiger Reserve and Sessa Orchid Wildlife Sanctuary were surveyed over a 5-year period (2009–2014). A total of 421 butterfly species were recorded during the survey, including two species new to India (Gonepteryx amintha thibetana and Bhutanitis ludlowi) and several species rediscoveries and range extensions in the Eastern Himalaya, most notably Arhopala belphoebe, Sovia separata magna, Aulocera saraswati vishnu, Calinaga aborica, Callerebia annada annada, and Callerebria scanda opima. Here we provide an annotated checklist of butterflies of the Kameng Protected Area Complex, including historical records, distributions, abundance, habitats and other notes on these 421 species. An additional 42 species recorded in older literature or by other authors in recent times are also listed, taking the total number of species recorded in the landscape to 463. Keywords: Biodiversity inventory, Eaglenest, eastern Himalaya, Kameng, Lepidoptera, Pakke, Sessa, species rediscoveries. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.11609/jott.2984.8.8.9053-9124 | ZooBank: urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:D4465E1D-D9A8-43DB-9F56-41EAF1549453 Editor: Anonymity requested. Date of publication: 13 August 2016 (online & print) Manuscript details: Ms # 4244 | Received 03 March 2015 | Final received 28 June 2016 | Finally accepted 15 July 2016 Citation: Sondhi, S. & K. Kunte (2016). Butterflies (Lepidoptera) of the Kameng Protected Area Complex, western Arunachal Pradesh, India. Journal of Threatened Taxa 8(8): 9053–9124; http://dx.doi.org/10.11609/jott.2984.8.8.9053-9124 Copyright: © Sondhi & Kunte 2016. Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. JoTT allows unrestricted use of this article in any medium, reproduc- tion and distribution by providing adequate credit to the author and the source of publication. Funding: SS’s research and conservation efforts in the landscape were funded by two Rufford Small Grants. More about this grant can be seen at http://www. rufford.org/projects/sanjay_sondhi. KK was supported by NCBS and a Ramanujan Fellowship from the Department of Science and Technology, Govt. of India, which funded his taxonomic research in London. Conflict of Interest:The authors declare no competing interests. Author Details: Sanjay Sondhi, Founder Trustee, Titli Trust (www.titlitrust.org) is a naturalist with an interest in Lepidoptera, Herpetofauna and Avifauna. He supports conservation research and action and conservation education programs in the Himalaya. Krushnamegh Kunte is a lepidopterist, an evolutionary biologist, and a faculty member at the National Centre for Biological Sciences, Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, Bengaluru. Visit his lab website, http:// biodiversitylab.org/, for more information. Author Contribution:SS carried out field surveys, collected and compiled data, photographed and identified species, conducted literature reviews and wrote the manuscript. KK assisted in species identification, contributed additional species records from earlier surveys, provided critical taxonomic information, and edited the manuscript. Acknowledgements: SS would like to acknowledge Ramana Athreya, IISER, Pune for supporting initial travel to Eaglenest and encouragement to initiate a long- term survey in the area. Thanks are due to Goutam Narayan and Nandita Hazarika of EcoSystems-India, Guwahati who provided on-the-ground support for logistics, funding, accounting and countless other issues, which made the surveys possible. SS would also acknowledge Tana Tapi, DFO Pakke Tiger Reserve, Millo Tasser, DFO Eaglenest, the forest staff at all the protected areas, Indi Glow of Bugun Welfare Society and the camp staff at Eaglenest and Takum Nabum and Suresh Pait of Ghora Aabhey Society and the camp staff at Pakke for their support on the ground. Numerous people accompanied SS during the surveys and he would like to thank them all for their support: Ajay Gaikwad, Alka Vaidya, Anand Pendharkar, Balakrishnan Valappil, Hemant Ogale, Geetha Iyer, Kedar Tokekar, Paul Waring, Peter Smetacek, Purnendu Roy, Rahul Natu, Tarun Karmakar, Tshetsholo Naro, Vidya Venkatesh and Yash Sondhi. SS would like to thank Yash Sondhi, who helped with the preparation of maps for this manuscript. Finally, SS would like to thank Rufford Small Grants, which funded the surveys in the area. KK would like to thank Geoff Martin and David Lees at the Natural History Museum, London, for permission to examine specimens in the museum and for facilitating his research, without which many of the species identifications reported here would not have been confirmed. LOGOs 9053 Butterflies of Kameng Protected Area Complex, western Arunachal Pradesh Sondhi & Kunte INTRODUCTION KPAC, and the western Arunachal Pradesh on the whole, have a sparse record of published butterfly inventories. The hill state of Arunachal Pradesh in northeastern Varshney (2008–2009) and our own literature searches India is situated at the junction of the Oriental and have yielded very few published records from this area. Palearctic biogeographic regions. The state is part of The earliest published work on butterflies in the study the Himalayan Biodiversity Hotspot, which stretches area was the butterfly collection made by Capt. F.M. from northeastern Pakistan eastward up to the Dibang Bailey in 1913. Bailey’s expedition began in May from Valley in eastern Arunachal Pradesh through which the the Dibang River (in what is currently eastern Arunachal Brahmaputra River enters India (http://www.cepf.net/ Pradesh), moved westwards across the upper ranges of resources/hotspots/Asia-Pacific/Pages/Himalaya.aspx) . the Subansiri River and eventually travelled to Tawang The parts of Arunachal Pradesh further east of the river and Sela Pass and into eastern Bhutan. Bailey reached are in the Indo-Burmese Biodiversity Hotspot. Arunachal the Sela Pass, Tawang District, and descended to Dirang, Pradesh has 80.39% of its land area forested (Forest West Kameng District only in October, so his butterfly Survey of India 2013) supporting unusually high species collection in our study area was limited to this month. diversity and many prominent endemic species, making Evans (1914) reported on this collection. Later, F.N. Betts this a globally important biodiversity area. collected butterflies from the Balipara Frontier Tract, east The state of Arunachal Pradesh is the largest amongst to Subansiri in western Arunachal Pradesh (Betts 1950). the seven ‘sister’ states of northeastern India. Historically This collection covered what are currently the districts this area was called the North-East Frontier Agency (NEFA) of Lower Subansiri, Papum Pare, East Kameng, West and till 1972 it remained constitutionally a part of the Kameng and Tawang in Arunachal Pradesh, and Sonitpur, state of Assam. In 1972, NEFA became the Union Territory Lakhimpur and Tinsukia bordering Assam. Betts reported of Arunachal Pradesh, and it became a full-fledged state 169 butterfly species but did not cover Hesperiidae and in 1987. The state is bordered by the Indian states of Lycaenidae. Assam and Nagaland on its southern border, Bhutan on Arora & Mondal (1981) reported 32 species of its western border, China on its northern border and Papilionidae of Arunachal Pradesh and surrounding areas Myanmar on its eastern border. Arunachal Pradesh has based on butterfly collections between 1961 and 1974, 26 major tribes, mostly inhabiting the hill forests of the housed at the Zoological Society of India (ZSI), Kolkata. state. Gupta & Shukla (1988) reported on the same collection The Kameng