In the study, we investigated associations between the morphological properties of two male wing patterns (one signalling and one non-signalling trait) and between these patterns and various environmental variables in seven species of the genus Gonepteryx. Our results show that the shape of UV patches (a signalling trait) is more asymmetric than the wing venation (a non-signalling trait).
In both examined traits, however, relationship between the environment and fluctuating asymmetry is significant only in a minority of species. Examination of correlations between the two investigated shapes and the environment yielded similar results, and while the shape of UV patterns tended to be more strongly associated with the environment than the venation patterns, the correlation reached a level of significance only in a minority of cases.
Due to the ambiguity of our findings, we cannot corroborate the hypothesis that UV patches act as biological signals of male quality in Gonepteryx butterflies. Finally, we found that UV patches discriminate among various Gonepteryx species better than the venation patterns do, which indicates that UV patches play a role in species recognition.