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                    Proterebia phagea (Borkhausen, 1788)             Steppe Ringlet                                                                                                                                                                       21603-BRACHA-PARPAR - 21603-BRACHA-PARPAR | 8 - A | 21-12-22 | 12:22:47 | SR:-- | Cyan



                    The Palaearctic, cold adapted and widespread satyrine   level. The pupa is squat, greyish-brown, 13-14 mm
                    genus  Erebia, is not represented in the Levant where   ORQJ DQG KDWFKHV DIWHU    GD\V  %DUWRŁRYi        -RKQ
                    the climate is too dry and hot. However, the related   Coutsis and Tristan Lafranchis, pers. comms.; Jutzeler &
                    Proterebia phegea (formerly P. afra, tribe Erebiini, Tutt,   /DIUDQFKLV        0LKRFL   ãDäLý
                    1896), known also as the Dalmatian Ringlet, is regarded
                    as an Asian steppe species with a relict European   5HFRUGHG KRVWSODQWV  Poaceae (Gramineae). In Europe:
                    GLVWULEXWLRQ   %DUWRŁRYi  et al., 2017, 2018), expanded   Festuca ovina, Bromus condensatus and possibly other
                    westwards from Iran in the last climatic optimum and   Poaceae spp.                                                                     © Dubi Benyamini                © Dubi Benyamini                 © Dubi Benyamini
                    appears to have existed in coastal Levant regions until                                                  8
                    about 100 years ago, when it was last collected before   'LVWULEXWLRQ
                    extinction. The species had been unknown in the
                    Levant until an envelope labelled ‘Sarepta, Libanon’*,   TL: “...in Russiae australioris desertis Dom. Bober” (S
                    containing 21 males from the Staudinger/Bang-Hass   Russia), from the Dalmatian coast (Croatia), N Greece
                    collection (1920-35?) was found in material sent   (Askio and Vourinos Mts), Crimea, C & E Turkey across
                    for setting from Dresden Museum, Germany to the    the Caucasus, N Iran, S Urals, and Kazakhstan to W
                    Zoological Museum, Jagiellonian University, Krakow,   Siberia. ‘Sarepta’, as mentioned above, refers to the
                    Poland (18 returned and 3 retained, Tomasz Pyrcz, pers.   ruins of the ancient Phoenician city of Zarephath, near              Ļ
                    comm.) – see Distribution. It is possibly the first of the   modern Sarafand, a coastal Lebanese town located at
                    cold-adapted species to begin the northwards retreat in   33º27’N: 35º18’E, 22 m asl, between Tyre and Sidon.
                    response to the warming climate that followed the end   It is ca. 430 km SSE of the (nowadays) closest Turkish
                    of the last glaciation period and accelerated nowadays   phegea (P.  afra) population ‘5 km S Dorf Sertavul’,
                    by the greenhouse effect. An early spring flyer, phegea   Taurus Mts, Mersin Province, Lat. 36º52’ N, 1460 m
                    is well adapted to late winter storms and will drop to   asl (Hesselbarth  et al., 1995(2): 851). What caused
                    the ground in cloudy weather or at the approach of rain,   the Lebanese extinction is unclear; the population, of                                                                                     © Dubi Benyamini
                    and will hide effectively among stones and rock crevices   Asian origin that forms part of the post-Eocene westerly       Samaria Desert, Kohav HaShahar, Rehavam’s Caves 620 m, 11 August 2019. P. telephassa adults aestivated on its backwalls.
                    (John Coutsis, pers. obs. in Lesvos Island, Greece). In   expansion, possibly suffered from wet periods that led to
                    Europe, a preference is shown for warm mountain slopes   the present-day disjunct & spotty European distribution.
                    and open dry steppe-like grassland. P. phegea was used   We cannot rule out the possibility that local pressure
                    in the logo design for the 20th SEL European Congress   of urbanization and agriculture along the populated
                    of Lepidopterology, Podgora, Dalmatia, Croatia (April,   Lebanese coast contributed to its final local extinction.
                    2017). It was selected not only because of its unique,
                    isolated ssp.  dalmata (Godart, 1824), which is at the   * Sarepta is a district of Volgograd (ex Stalingrad) in S. Russia. It is a
                    western limit of its world distribution, but also because   well-known and famous butterfly region and origin of several butterfly
                    it is listed as (NT) ‘Near threatened’ in the Croatian Red   species due to German settlers that inhabited the region since 1765.
                    List. The satyrine is absent from the greener coastal   Omitting the word “Liban” from the phegeas envelope change the whole
                    areas, but inhabits the more arid steppe-like regions of   story as Sarepta - nowadays the city Krasnoarmeyskiy Rayon, South of
                    inner Dalmatia, where there are fears that it may lose   Volgograd, S Russia is in phegea northern known distribution (Della
                    its preferred biotopes and become endangered due to   Bruna, C. et al., 2002: 29)
                    the abandonment of extensive grazing and resulting
                    VXFFHVVLRQDO  VFUXE  GHYHORSPHQW   %DUWRŁRYi
                    pers. comm.). Proterebia phegea is a monotypic species.


                    %LRORJ\                                                                                                                                                                               Ļ

                    )OLJKW SHULRG  March/April to July 600-1200 m in Greece.
                    Date unknown for Lebanon.

                    /LIH KLVWRU\  univoltine. Courting and mating take place
                    around midday; couples in cop. hide among grasses and
                    do not tend to fly. Eggs are laid at the base of the LHP
                    or dropped in flight every ~50 cm while females hover
                    low over potential hostplant grasses. White when laid,
                    eggs are 1.3 mm in diameter, smooth with fine vertical
                    ribs, hatching after 13–19 days. L1 is 3 mm long, white
                    with short hairs and five longitudinal thin reddish-brown
                    lines and a light brown head with six round black spots.
                    Larvae commence feeding but diapause in mid-summer,
                    to resume feeding in autumn-winter upon re-growth of
                    fresh hostplants. Feeding at night, they grow to 30 mm
                    at L5, when the body is striped with longitudinal lines
                    of green, white and brown shades. It overwinters among
                    grass clumps and pupates in early spring at ground                                       © Tolga Demir                                                                                                      © Stav Talal


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