“…A range‐shifting species is “a species tracking its environmental niche through a range expansion or relocation beyond its historical native range” (Wallingford et al., 2020). Acraea terpsicore was until recently considered endemic to the Indian subcontinent (India, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka – Chowdhury et al., 2017; Larsen, 2004; van der Poorten & van der Poorten, 2016; Wynter‐Blyth, 1957), but during the past few decades it has naturally and rapidly expanded its geographic range, with chronological records from the following countries (years): Thailand (1984–1988: Nishimura, 1994; Takanishi, 1988; West, 1996), Nepal (<1989: Smith, 1989), Malay Peninsula (1992: Arshad et al., 1996), Vietnam (1992: Nishimura, 1994; Pierre & Bernaud, 1997), China (Hainan) (1994: Chou, 1994; Huang, 2002), Singapore (2006: Khew, 2008), Indonesia (2008–2011: Braby et al., 2014a; Matsumoto et al., 2012), Timor‐Leste (2012: Braby, Bertelsmeier, et al., 2014), Australia (2012: Braby, Bertelsmeier, et al., 2014; Braby, Thistleton & Neal, 2014; Sanderson et al., 2012), Laos (2012: Nakamura & Wakahara, 2012); Pakistan (2012: Mal et al., 2014), Cambodia (2013: Braby, Thistleton, & Neal, 2014), Bhutan (2014: Nidup, 2015) and Malaysian Borneo (2016: Abang et al., 2017).…”