Abstract:
Hypolimnas misippus is a polymorphic and mimetic butterfly with a pantropicaP distribution. The polymorphism is
autosomal and female-limited, the several female forms being generally regarded as Batesian mimics of the distasteful,
toxic and polymorphic danaine butterfly Danaus chrysippus. The female phenotypes of H. misippus are described and
classified. New data, from the rearing of 140 broods of H. misippus in Ghana and Sierra Leone, are analysed together
with older material (21 broods) from other parts of Africa. Form misippus (genotype M-) is found to be genetically
dominant to form maria (genotype mm). However, a large proportion of mm butterflies has an intermediate
phenotype, especially in association with white on the hiudwing. Evidence is adduced to show that the genes giving
hindwing white are variably epistatic over the 'maria' pattern in the mm genotype, producing a phenotype transitional
to or even identical to misippus. The various intermediate phenotypes are poor mimics of D. chrysippus: their
abundance, geographical range and, hence, significance have been much underestimated.