{{short description|Species of butterfly}} {{Speciesbox | name = Five-bar swordtail | image = Close wing position of Graphium antiphates, Cramer, 1775 – Five-bar Swordtail WLB.jpg | image_caption = Ventral view | image2 = Open wing position of Graphium antiphates Cramer, 1775 – Five-bar Swordtail 2.jpg | image2_caption = Dorsal view | genus = Graphium (butterfly) | species = antiphates | authority = (Cramer, 1775) | synonyms = * ''Papilio antiphates'' <small>Cramer, 1775</small> * ''Pathysa antiphates'' <small>(Cramer, 1775)</small> }}
'''''Graphium antiphates''''', The '''Five-bar swordtail'''<ref name=Smetacek/><ref name=funet/> is a species of papilionid butterfly found in South and Southeast Asia. The species was first described by Pieter Cramer in 1775.<ref name=Smetacek>{{Cite book|url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/287980260|title=A Synoptic Catalogue of the Butterflies of India |last1=Varshney |first1=R.K. |last2=Smetacek|first2=Peter|publisher=Butterfly Research Centre, Bhimtal & Indinov Publishing, New Delhi|year=2015|isbn=978-81-929826-4-9|location=New Delhi|pages=10|doi=10.13140/RG.2.1.3966.2164}}</ref><ref name=funet>{{cite web |last=Savela |first=Markku |url=http://www.nic.funet.fi/pub/sci/bio/life/insecta/lepidoptera/ditrysia/papilionoidea/papilionidae/papilioninae/graphium/#antiphates |title=''Graphium antiphates'' (Cramer, [1775]) |website=Lepidoptera and Some Other Life Forms |access-date=July 2, 2018}}</ref>
==Description== {{Entomology glossary hatnote}} thumb|left The ground colour of the upperside of both males and females is white. The forewing has the cell crossed by five short black bands, of which the basal extends to the dorsum, the sub-basal into interspace 1, the medial and pre-apical up to the median vein, and the apical or fifth along the discocellulars; this last band extends broadly on both sides of the veinlets and terminates at the lower apex of the cell; beyond these are broad postdiscal and terminal black transverse bands from costa to tornal angle; the two bands coalesce below vein 4 and terminate in a point at the tornus; the white portions of the cell anteriorly overlaid with pale green; short broken glossy green bands between the black cellular apical band and the discal band and anteriorly between the latter and the terminal band.<ref name="bingham"/> The upperside of the hindwing has the basal three-fourths uniformly white, with black markings on the underside that show through; the terminal fourth dark grey traversed by a curved irregular subterminal series of black crescent shaped marks that ends in a black tornal spot and a terminal black band that follows the indentations of the wing; the emargination (notches in a margin) below the black tornal spot are edged with ochraceous; the tail blackish grey, edged and tipped with white.<ref name="bingham"/>
The underside of the forewing is similar to the upperside in markings but the green shading over the white portions in the basal half of the cell more decided; the discal and terminal transverse black bands are separate, and are not joined posteriorly, the former edged posteriorly on both sides by dark grey due to the black on the upperside that shows through by transparency. The underside of the hindwing is half green on the basal part while the outer half white; a large black tornal spot; a black line along the dorsum that curves above the tornal spot outwards to vein 2; a straight subbasal black band from costa across cell that terminates on vein 2, where it joins the dorsal black line; a broader black band from costa across apex of cell extended into base of interspace 3; an irregular discal series of black markings curved inwards posteriorly towards the tornal spot; a subterminal series of very small slender black lunules in pairs, the ground colour on the inner side of these darkened to rich ochreous yellow; lastly, a series of short terminal black bars in the interspaces so arranged as to follow indentations of the termen; tail dusky black edged with white. Antenna black; head and thorax anteriorly with a broad black medial band, rest of thorax bluish; abdomen white, marked beneath on each side by a black stripe.<ref name="bingham"/>thumb|left|Composite specimen in Moore, 1903, Pl.474, 1b (Left), male from Sikkim, India; 1c (Right) male from Sri Lanka.
There are various published opinions on notable variations, often presented as races, varieties, or later subspecies. For example, Bingham (1907) says (p.99) that "Race ''alcibiades'', Fabr. is the most widely spread race of ''antiphates'', from which it differs as follows: Upperside of males and females, all the black markings shorter and narrower. Forewing: the discal and terminal bands separate, the former rarely extended below vein 3, the latter in no specimen reaches the dorsal margin. Hindwing: the broad grey area on the terminal margin reduced to a small patch of grey at the apices of interspaces 2 to 4; the subterminal black markings rarely present anteriorly, generally confined to the limits of the grey patch. Underside: the extent of the black markings similarly reduced, otherwise as in the typical form".<ref name="bingham">{{Source-attribution|sentence=yes|{{cite book |last1=Bingham |first1=C.T. |author-link=Charles Thomas Bingham |title=The Fauna of British India, Including Ceylon and Burma |url=https://archive.org/stream/butterflies02bingiala#page/96/mode/2up/ |volume=II |edition=1st |publisher= Taylor and Francis, Ltd. |location=London |year=1907|pages=97–100}}}}</ref> However, a large number of authors have present contending view on the appropriate taxon names for any subdivisions within ''Graphium antiphates'' <small>(Cramer, 1775)</small>, and their geographic distributions.<ref name=MooreIndica>{{Cite book|url=https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/103503#page/34/mode/1up|title=Lepidoptera Indica. Vol. VI|last=Moore|first=Frederic|author-link=Frederic Moore|publisher=Lovell Reeve and Co.|year=1903–1905|location=London|pages=22–23}}</ref>
==Habits== It is known to mud-puddle.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Mathew |first1=G. |last2=Binoy |first2=C.F. |year=2002 |title=Migration of butterflies (Lepidoptera: Rhopalocera) in the New Amarambalam Reserve Forest of the Nilgiri Biosphere Reserve |journal=Zoos' Print Journal |volume=17 |issue=8 |pages=844–847 |doi=10.11609/jott.zpj.17.8.844-7 |doi-access=free }}</ref>
==Life history== The caterpillar is white in the early stage and turns yellow in the last instar. In its late stage, it is like the caterpillar of ''Pathysa nomius''. (Davidson & Aitken quoted in Bingham) The green pupa, is as in all swallowtails, is held by a silk girdle. Said to be found mainly on the plant ''Unona lawii'' and never under stones. (Davidson and Aitken)<ref name="bingham"/>
==Gallery== <gallery> File:FivebarSwordtail-Aralam-DSC 3051A.jpg|Five-bar swordtails in Aralam Wildlife Sanctuary, India File:Graphium antiphates mudpuddling someshwara.JPG|Five-bar swordtails mud-puddling in Someshwara Wildlife Sanctuary, India File:PathysaAlcibiadesLP 474.jpg|Larva and pupa File:Photographed in Buxa Tiger reserve..jpg|Photographed in Buxa Tiger Reserve, West Bengal. </gallery>
==References== {{Commons category}} {{Wikispecies}} {{Reflist|2}}
{{Taxonbar|from=Q775758}}
antiphates Category:Butterflies of Asia Category:Lepidoptera of Pakistan Category:Butterflies of Singapore Category:Butterflies of Indochina Category:Taxa named by Pieter Cramer Category:Butterflies described in 1775