Context: Recently, a four-ringed butterfly was rediscovered in the Namdapha National Park after 61 years.
Four-Ringed Butterfly
About: The great four-ring (Ypthima cantliei) is a member of the Satyrinae butterfly subfamily.
Survey Documentation: Photographed during a survey to document butterfly diversity in the Miao range of Namdapha National Park (2018-19).
Identification: Identified based on general morphological patterns and habitat.
Historical Record: Last reported in 1957 from Margherita, Assam.
Genus Diversity: The genus Ypthima belongs to the Nymphalidae family, which includes about 6,000 butterfly species. In India, 23 of the 35 Ypthima species are found in the northeast.
Global Diversity: Highest Ypthima diversity is in China, especially in Yunnan and Sichuan provinces, with significant diversity also in Nepal, Bhutan, Myanmar, and northeastern India.
Namdapha National Park
Location: Situated in Arunachal Pradesh, India.
Boundaries: Flanked by the Patkai hills to the south and southeast, and the Himalayas to the north. Positioned between the Dapha bum range of the Mishmi Hills and the Patkai range.
Biogeographic Areas: Part of both the Palearctic and Indo-Malayan biogeographic regions.
River: Named after the Namdapha river, which originates from Daphabum and flows north-south across the park.