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Pararge aegeria  (Linnaeus, 1758)                                  Speckled Wood                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                             21603-BRACHA-PARPAR - 21603-BRACHA-PARPAR | 4 - B | 21-12-22 | 12:22:47 | SR:-- | Cyan   #21603-BRACHA-PARPAR - 21603-



 Strongly favours dappled sunlight in light woodland, often
 near watercourses or other wet areas where flight appears
 aimless and erratic when not being territorial. However,
 males are usually territorial and vigorously defend their
 territory (a chosen perch in a patch of sunlight) and are
 often seen in spiralling flights, intercepting intruders to their
 territory. Occasionally forms colonies, and communal night-
 time roosting has been reported. Head to head courtship
 involves the enveloping of the female antennae between
 the male’s forewings, where contact is made with the male   © Peter J. Russel  © Wolfgang Wagner  © Wolfgang Wagner  © Wolfgang Wagner
 androconia; mating occurs at treetop level (Thomas &
 Lewington, 2014: 236). Attracted to light traps (Bálint et al.,
 2016). Not recorded between 2013-2021 and regarded as                          DGXOW  1    2    3    4        5    6    7    8    9   10  1 1  1  1  1  1  1  12
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                       HJJ
 locally extinct at mid-elevations of Mt Hermon, due to cow                 lar v a
          pupa
 overgrazing since the late 1990s. Two observations in 28
 May 2021 and 4 June 2021 both near Mt Hermon ski lower
 station at 1600 m are possibly new re-establishment of the
 Speckled Wood from lower biotopes in N Jordan valley and
 close-by Lebanese populations. Ranked Endangered (EN) in
 the Israeli Red list of butterflies due to its small geographic   © Wolfgang Wagner  © Wolfgang Wagner  © Wolfgang Wagner
 range (Renan et al., 2022 (in prep.)).
 %LRORJ\
 )OLJKW  SHULRG  Mid February to September in Israel’s N
 Jordan Valley; Late May to late July, 1500--2050 m in Mt
 Hermon; Year round, emerging earlier at lower elevations
 in Lebanon, found from the coast to 1500 m (Larsen, 1974:
 141); Year round, redused activity Nov.-Feb. in Cyprus, sl to
 Troodos summit at 1950 m (Makris, 2003: 258); March-
 Oct. in Hatay, sl to 2000 m (Atahan et al., 2018: 101); Early
 April to September around Aammiq area in the Beqaa Valley
 of E Lebanon (Beale & Sprenger, 2006).  © Wolfgang Wagner    © Wolfgang Wagner                   © Dubi Benyamini
 /LIH KLVWRU\  bivoltine to polyvoltine, depending on elevation.
 Eggs are laid singly, on or beneath blades of grass. Shreeve
 (1986) stated, ’females distribute eggs over a large area
 with extended flights after laying each egg…’. The egg is
 rounded, 0.8 mm in height, porcelain white when laid and
 with a finely textured surface. L1 hatches after 7-10 days
 and eats the eggshell. L1 is white with a glossy black head,
 2.5 mm in length and hairy. At maturity, L5 is 28 mm long,
 green with longitudinal yellowish and dark stripes and short
 hairs. The pupa, which is suspended from the hostplant, is
 12.5 mm in length, pale green to brown-green and hatches   © Dubi Benyamini
 after 10-14 days. In the Levant, as in Europe, the species
 may overwinter in either the larval or the pupal stages   © Peter J. Russell
 (Warecki, 2010: 123; Lafranchis et al., 2015: 563).
 5HFRUGHG   KRVWSODQWV   Poaceae  (Gramineae)  –
 Brachypodium pinnatum,  Cynodon dactylon,  Dactylis
 glomerata, Avena, Elymus & Poa spp.
 'LVWULEXWLRQ
 TL: S Europe and N Africa. Widely distributed from N Africa
 to Europe and Russia, Caucasia, Turkey, Cyprus, Syria,
 Lebanon, Israel (reaching its southernmost distribution
 point in the upper Jordan Valley), and C Asia. (Absent from
 Jordan and Sinai.) The nominotypical ssp. flies in the Levant.
 © Albert Keshet                              © Peter J. Russell                                   © Adrian Hoskins
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