Butterfly Biodata:
Genus: Eurema Hübner, 1819
Species: blanda Boisduval, 1836
Subspecies: snelleni Moore, 1907
Wingspan of Adult Butterfly: 35-45mm
Caterpillar Local Host Plant: Falcateria moluccana (Fabaceae, common name: Albizia).
A large group of puddling Three Spot Grass Yellow adults.
A Three Spot Grass Yellow with the "three spots" illustrated.
Physical Description of Adult Butterfly:
Above, the wings are deep lemon-yellow. The forewing has a black border which is regularly scalloped and deeply excavated between veins 2 and 4 (more so in the female than in the male). Underneath, the wings are yellow with freckled brown spots. There are typically three cell spots on the forewing and a black spot at the base of space 7 on the hindwing. It is not uncommon for some individuals to have a large brown apical spot/patch on the forewing. Males have a brand lying along the cubital vein on the forewing underside.
Field Observations of Butterfly Behaviour:
The Three Spot Grass Yellow is common in Singapore and can be found both inside and outside the nature reserves. The adults can be seen fluttering in their habitatss in the company of other Grass Yellow spp. leading to difficulty in identifying them correctly. They regularly visit flowers for nectar and puddle on wet grounds for minerals. There have been records of population outbreaks when hundreds of them can be seen together in various locations across Singapore.
Another Three Spot Grass Yellow with lowest of the three spots diminutive.
Early Stages:
Across the vast region where the Three Spot Grass Yellow can be found, several larval host plants in the Fabaceae family have been recorded. Locally, only one host plant, Falcateria moluccana, has been recorded so far. The caterpillars feed on the leaves of the host plant. They are gregarious throughout all five instars of their life cycle, often eating, resting, moulting and pupating together in groups.
Local host plant: Falcateria moluccana.
A mating pair of the Three Spot Grass Yellow.
The eggs of the Three Spot Grass Yellow are laid in a cluster of several tens on a young shoot of of the host plant. The spindle shaped egg is laid standing at one end with a length of about 1.3-1.4mm. It is whitish in color and has indistinct shallow vertical ridges. The micropylar sits at the tip of the standing egg.
A cluster of about 40-odd eggs of the Three Spot Grass Yellow laid on a young shoot of the local host plant.
Left: An egg of the Three Spot Grass Yellow. Right: a mature egg with the young larva caught in the act of nibbling away the egg shell.
The eggs take about 3-4 days to hatch. Each newly hatched caterpillar has a length of about 1.7mm and has a dark brown head capsule. It has a cylindrical and pale whitish body covered with dorso-lateral and lateral rows of tubercles running lengthwise. As is the case for other Eurema spp., each tubercle has a seta emerging from the middle of it with the tip of the seta bearing
a droplet-like structure. These droplet-bearing setae is a feature seen in all five instars of the larval phase.
Newly hatched caterpillars of the Three Spot Grass Yellow.
Two views of a newly hatched caterpillar of the Three Spot Grass Yellow.
After hatching, the young caterpillar eats the empty egg shell for its first meal, and then moves on to eat the leaf lamina for subsequent meals. The body colour turns yellowish green as growth progresses. The body length reaches 3.8 to 4 mm in about 2 days before the moult to the 2nd instar.
Two view of a 1st instar caterpillar, length 2.5mm.
A group of 1st instar caterpillars of the Three Spot Grass Yellow.
Two view of a late 1st instar caterpillar, dormant prior to its moult, length 3.8mm.
The 2nd instar caterpillar is yellowish green in body colour. The dark brown head capsule has the same tiny setae-bearing tubercles as those on the body surface. A pale yellowish band runs laterally along each side of the body. This instar lasts about 2 days with the body length reaching 7-8mm.
Two views of a 2nd instar caterpillar, length 6.2mm.
A group of 2nd instar caterpillars of the Three Spot Grass Yellow.
Two views of a late 2nd instar caterpillar, dormant prior to its moult, length: 7.8mm
The 3rd instar caterpillar resembles the 2nd instar caterpillar closely. The head capsule is still dark brown overall but the front mod-section is now yellowish. This instar is fast-paced and takes about 1-1.5 days to complete with body length reaching about 10-11mm.
Two views of a 3rd instar caterpillar, length: 10mm.
Two views of late 3rd instar caterpillar, dormant prior to its moult, length: 10.5mm.
A group of 3rd instar caterpillars of the Three Spot Grass Yellow (with a a few 1st instar caterpillars in the mix).
The body of the 4th instar caterpillar is still yellowish green but the head capsule is now darker than in the previous instar, becoming almost all black in coloration except for the frontoclypeus (triangular area above the mouth parts) which is yellowish. This instar takes about 2-2.5 days to complete with body length reaching about 17mm.
Two views of a 4th instar caterpillar, length: 13.8mm.
Two views of a late 4th instar caterpillar, dormant prior to its moult, length: 16.8mm.
A group of 4th instar caterpillars of the Three Spot Grass Yellow.
The 5th and final instar caterpillar resembles the 4th instar caterpillar closely. Unlike some other Grass Yellow species, the yellowish lateral bands do not become broader, whitish or more prominent in the final instar. The numerous setae-bearing tubercles are more prominent as they appear in darker green in contrast to the paler body base colour.
The droplets at the end of these setae turn bluish in this instar, giving the caterpillar a darker and more bluish appearance. The 5th (and final) instar lasts for 2-3 days, and the body length reaches up to 26-28mm.
Two views of a 5th instar caterpillar, early in this stage, length: 17mm.
Two views of a 5th instar caterpillar, length: 23.5mm.
A close-up view of the bluish droplets at the tip of body setae.
A group of 5th instar caterpillars of the Three Spot Grass Yellow.
On the last day of the 5th instar, the body of the caterpillar shortens and the body colour changes to either bright or dull green (with a hint of pink tone). It ceases feeding and comes to a halt on the underside of a stem/stalk on the host plant. Here the caterpillar spins a silk pad and a silk girdle. With its posterior end secured to the silk pad via claspers, and the body suspended at the mid-section with the girdle, the caterpillar soon becomes immobile in this pre-pupatory pose. It is not uncommon that a number of caterpillars choose to do so on the same stem/stalk at a short distance from each other.
A pre-pupatory larva of the Three Spot Grass Yellow.
Pupation takes place about 0.5 day later. The pupa secures itself with the same silk girdle as in the pre-pupal stage, but with the cremaster replacing claspers in attaching the posterior end to the silk pad, It has a pointed head (with a whitish cephalic horn) and a keeled wing pad, and its body is typically adorned with a number of small black spots/patches. There is a faint pale brownish dorsal band. The body colour varies from pale green to yellowish green or even pale brownish green to dark brown. Length of pupae: 18-19mm..
Four pupae of the Three Spot Grass Yellow, showing variations in coloration and markings.
Two views of a pupa of the Three Spot Grass Yellow.
Two views of a mature pupa of the Three Spot Grass Yellow.
The now transparent wing pad shows the yellow forewing upperside with its black border.
After about 4 days of development, the pupal skin turns translucent as the development within the pupal case comes to an end. The yellow coloration and back borders on the forewing upperside are now discernible. The following day, the adult butterfly emerges from the pupal case.
A newly eclosed Three Spot Grass Yellow clinging onto its empty pupal case.
A sequence of pictures showing the development of three Three Spot Grass Yellow caterpillars from the pre-pupal stage to the adult stage.
References:
- [C&P4] The Butterflies of The Malay Peninsula, A.S. Corbet and H.M. Pendlebury, 4th Edition, Malayan Nature Society, 1992.
- Butterflies of Thailand, Pisuth Ek-Amnuay, 2nd Edition, 2012
- A Field Guide to the Butterflies of Singapore, Khew S.K., Ink On Paper Communications, 2010.
Text by Horace Tan, Photos by Steven Wee, PF Loke, Tan Ben Jin, Khew S K and Horace Tan
Another fantastic article about my favourite genus of butterflies. A great start to 2015 for me!!
ReplyDeleteI can't believe how quickly the butterfly develops there. Potentially two and a half weeks from the egg being laid until the butterfly emerges. How long do the butterflies live for?
Nick, it is great that this article is of interest to you. :)
ReplyDeleteI am not in a position to answer your question on the life span of the Three Spot Grass Yellow due to lack of observations on my part.
I reckon it should be at least one or two weeks.
What a beautiful and informative article! Thanks much.
ReplyDelete7 Jul 2021. Thank you for sharing such a detailed research article of the Three Spot Grass Yellow six years ago. I have seen this species in Yio Chu Kang Crescent secondary forest.
ReplyDeleteMay I ask whether the author can share some information on how the detailed images of the butterfly are captured in camera? I am an amateur photographer using a Canon DSLR 90D with 18-200 mm lens and shoot hand-held. My images are not that great, hence I ask about your camera settings. Thank you and best wishes.