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 Hipparchia (aristaeus) senthes  (Fruhstorfer, 1908) Southern Grayling                                                         21603-BRACHA-PARPAR - 21603-BRACHA-PARPAR | 6 - A | 21-12-22 | 12:22:47 | SR:-- | Cyan



 The most common Parahipparchia in N Levant. Flies
 in open cedar, juniper, oak & pine forests. Adults
 frequent tree trunks, its preferred resting place and
 bask on early mornings and late afternoons on rocks,
 bare slopes, along tracks and open landscapes.
 Southern Graylings were recorded nectaring on   6
 flowers of  Rubus sp.,  Sambucus ebulus &  Thymus
 sp. and sometimes mud puddling by males. Migration                          DGXOW  1  1    2    3    4    5    6    7    8    9   10  11  12                         DGXOW  1    2    3    4    5    6    7    8    9   10  11  12
                                                   1
                                                   1
                                                  1
                                                  1
                                               10
                         3
                                               10
                                                      12
                     2
                               HJJ
                                                                                 HJJ
 was observed on 23rd May 1977 in the Saronic                          DGXOW  1  1    2    3    4    5    6    7    8    9   10  11  12                lar v a                lar v a
 10
 10
 4
 3
 7
 9
 8
 2
 1
 12
 1
 1
 1
 10
 91
 0
 9
                                                                    pupa
                  pupa
                       HJJ
 Gulf’s island Idhra (Hydra), Greece early afternoon;                 lar v a
          pupa
 “..between 100 and 200 m altitude above sea level...
 the butterflies were passing by at a steady speed
 and direction (northwards) having started their flight
 from much higher up...toward the island’s shores.
 Unfortunately I never found out whether this mass
 movement continued on over the sea and towards
 the shores of the Peloponnese” (just 7 km away)
 (John Coutsis pers. comm.). Local migration was also
 observed by Koçak on 9 July 1988; near Kayaliyatak,
 both genders were flying northwards, low over the
 ground until 20:00, alighting shortly only for nectaring
 (Hesselbarth et al., 1995(2): 900; Koçak, 1989)
 %LRORJ\
 )OLJKW SHULRG  early May to October with mid-summer
 aestivation 160-2100 m in Turkey (Hesselbarth  et
 al., 1995(2): 900); July to November 100-1800 m in
 Hatay (Atahan et al., 2018: 77 & pers. comm.) and 24
 September 2013 S Amanos Mt between Serinyol and
 Arsuz, 1100 m Hatay (pers. obs.).

 /LIH KLVWRU\  univoltine. gravid female was observed
 RQ      6HSWHPEHU        RQ  WRS  RI  1  .L]LOGDø   6
 Amanos Mt) between Serinyol and Arsuz flying in
 an open windblown small oak & pine wood. It laid
 singly typical white  Hipparchia’s eggs between 25-
 30.9 (egg measurements of 0.7 mm wide and 19-24
 vertical ribs were taken by Jutzeler et al. (1995) on H.
 aristaeus). On 6 October motionless L1 larvae were   © Dubi Benyamini            f. ???
 observed on dry stems and leaves of Piptatherum sp.,   f. pirata
 2-2.2 mm long, light brown with three mid-dorsal and   5HFRUGHG   KRVWSODQWV    Brachypodium   retusum   C. b. larnacana Oberthür, 1909  C. C.  b. me ri di on al is   St au di ng er ,  18 86
                                                                                              1
                                                                                     Staudinger
                                                                    C. b. meridionalis Staudinger, 1886886
                                                                       b.
                                                                         meridionalis
 upper sub-dorsal brown strips, two lower sub-dorsal   (Tshikolovets, 2011: 413),  Brachypodium distachyon,
 thin brown strips and in-between four lines of spots   Piptatherum miliaceum &  Poa infirma (Lab) and other
 running along its body. The true legs and the forked   Poaceae (Gramineae) spp.
 tail are light brown, head pinkish-brown punctuated
 dark brown tiny spots and a few hairs pointed   © Dubi Benyamini                                 © Dubi Benyamini
 backwards located at the rear edge of the tails –   'LVWULEXWLRQ
 illustr. After a short diapause L1 resumes feeding   /LIH &LUFOH   Chazara briseis meridionalis
 by the end of October upon growth of small young   TL: Taygetos, Greece as a new ssp. of “Eumenis (Satyrus)
 grass seedlings induced by autumn rains. Larval   semele”. Distributed from Sicily and S Italy (Campania &
 development proceeds during the winter and early   Calabria) to Albania, Macedonia, S Bulgaria, S Greece
 spring in warmer periods when feeding is nocturnal.   and the Peloponnese, the E Aegean Islands Chios
 Like its closed subgener  H.  cypriensis it will attain   and Lesbos, West & Central Anatolia to Tokat - Sivas
 25-27 mm long and will pupate in the soil or under   – Malatya reaching its SE limit in C Hatay / N Levant.   © M. Gascoigne-Pees  © Martin Gascoigne-Pees  © Martin Gascoigne-Pees
 litter four-five weeks before eclosion as early as end   Unrecorded from S Russia, Syria, Cyprus, Lebanon,
 of April in lower altitudes and May – June higher up.     Israel, Jordan and Sinai (Hesselbarth  et al., 1995(2):
 Similar to cypriensis’ behaviour they will mate and fly   900, Tuzov et al., 1997: 240-242; Zarikian, 2016).
 up the mountains to aestivate during the hot summer   Accepted by Hesselbarth  et al., (1995) as ssp. of  H.
 months in the shade of cooler forests (Lafranchis,   aristaeus. Nominotypical  H. (P.)  senthes ssp.  senthes
 2019; Jutzeler et al., 1995; DB breeding notes).    flies in N Levant (Sbordoni  et al., 2018).
                    © Martin Gascoigne-Pees  © Martin Gascoigne-Pees  © Martin Gascoigne-Pees  © Martin Gascoigne-Pees
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