Many insects carry maternally inherited bacteria which kill male offspring. Such bacteria will spread if male death benefits
the female siblings who transmit the bacterium, and they are therefore expected in insects with antagonistic sibling
interactions. We report that the butterfly Danaus chrysippus is host to a maternally inherited male-killing bacterium. Using
diagnostic PCR and rDNA sequence, the bacterium was identified as a Spiroplasma closely related to 2 ladybird beetle
male-killers and the tick symbiont Spiroplasma ixodetis. The male-killer was found to have a geographically restricted
distribution, with up to 40% of females being infected in East Africa, but no detectable infection in small samples from
other populations. Danaus chrysippus is a surprising host for a male-killer as its eggs are laid singly. This suggests that the
ecological conditions permitting male-killers to invade may be more widespread than previously realized.