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 (JJ  OD\LQJ  the relatively large eggs are laid singly,   'LVWULEXWLRQ                                                        21603-BRACHA-PARPAR - 21603-BRACHA-PARPAR | 8 - B | 22-01-02 | 12:34:18 | SR:-- | Cyan
 usually at mid-day, preferably on dry leaves and stalks
 low over the ground, at the base of LHPs or on ground /   TL: “Syria, Arabia félici et deserta” and Aden, Yemen. The
 stones. Estimated egg quantity is a few tens per female.   species’ distribution ranges from the dry areas of Africa
 to Oman and SW Arabian Peninsula, Jordan (absent
 /DUYDO  GHIHQFH   KLEHUQDWLRQ     DHVWLYDWLRQ  their   from Egypt), Israel, Lebanon, Syria (Latakia mountains &
 polymorphism (discussed above) gives them excellent   Coastal area NW Syria; Mudar Salimeh, Syrian Butterflies
 camouphlage on dry and green LHP’s leaves and stalks   web-site), Cyprus and Turkey. The southern distribution
 but on several occasions aggregation of several larvae   limit in the Levant is in Yatir Forest 550 m, S Hebron   © Dubi Benyamini  © Dubi Benyamini  © Dubi Benyamini
 1.5 – 5 cm apart in  &RPPXQDO  IHHGLQJ was possibly   Mts Lat. 31°20’N (ILS field trip, 8 May 2004) Israel and
                                DGXOW
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                                                  11
                                                     2
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                                           9
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 aiming to give them safety in numbers. Feeding usually   Gawr as-Safi S Dead Sea Lat. 31°01’N, Jordan (illustr.                         HJJ  1    2    3    4    5    6    7    8    9   10  11  12
                       lar v a
 at night starting from ~ two and a half hours before   3). But up in S Jordan Edom Mountains the limit expands            pupa
 sunset but fully grown larvae feed sometimes also   further south to Dana Reserve, Lat. 30°40’N near Petra
 during day; they are possibly too hungry to wait for the   (Benyamini, 2002a). While collected in the White Nile
 night. During adults absence (Mid December to early   near Kanisa (Lat. 6°50’) and recorded as “not uncommon
 April 2020) larvae were not observed on the hostplants   at Port Sudan”, Sudan by Longstaff (1913), Y. asterope is
 and on 3 February 2020 one large pot of perennial Poa   unrecorded from Egypt and north Red Sea region: absent
 trivialis was checked carefully for early stages where   from the north-western coastal regions of the Red Sea   © Dubi Benyamini
 only ten diapausing larvae (no pupae) were found at   and Sinai, however along the eastern Red Sea coast the   ©Dubi Benyamini
 the base of this preferred LHP, including: four 9-12   species is present in SW Hejaz up to Ashaira (Medinah)
 mm long L3 (40%), three 17-18 mm long L4 (30%) and   (Larsen, 1983: 440), but has yet to be looked for along the
 three 20-24 mm long fully grown L5 (30%). Mid-summer   remaining (northerly) coastal region of Hejaz and along
 slow-down activity with fewer observations of adults   the Gulf of Aqaba (Benyamini & Müller, 2020). Further
 (4.8% of annual activity between 15 July to 15 August   northwards until the Dead Sea its absence along 160 km
 was measured by BMS Israel) is reflected also in larval   of the Arava north of Eilat and Aqaba is confirmed by the
 activity, not reported before: On 18 July 2014 in Beit-  author. There is no continuous link bridging Y. asterope   © Dubi Benyamini  © Dubi Benyamini
 Arye, a 20 mm long L5 light brown motionless larva   populations in the United Arab Emirates and Oman with
 was observed under a dry leaf of  Setaria verticillata,   those in tropical Asia, so there is some uncertainty
 DB suspected that it was parasitized but its colour did   about the presence of Y. asterope asterope in India and
 not change and finally it pupated on 20 October - illustr   Myanmar (Burma).  Y.  asterope  mahratta Moore, 1884,
 1 (previous page) and on the afternoon of 6 November   is generally accepted to occur in western India (Larsen,    P. p. pelopea
 a male hatched successfully. This is the first reported   2002), although Larsen (pers. comm. to EJ) suggests this
 three months larval mid-summer aestivation of a fully   might be a distinct species. The nominotypical ssp. flies
 grown Y. asterope larva (DB breeding notes). However it   in the Levant.
 does not mean that all asterope larvae aestivate in mid-
 summer i.e. in cooler biotopes larvae do not stop feeding
 for aestivation.

 $GXOW  GHIHQFH   WKDQDWRVLV   On 7 September 2019 in
 Beit Arye DB tried to collect the fourteenth specimen for
 the breeding experiment but under the collecting net it
 closed its wings and turned sideways on to the ground
 pretending to be dead in typical thanatosis. This type of   Turkey, Gaziantep S.Nizip 750m. 30.5.1991: pr. Leg. R Leestyans
 behaviour is rare for the African Ringlet (DB field notes).
 3UHGDWRUV   most of the adults losses were to jumping
 spiders (Salticidae), but also to green preying mantids   © Dubi Benyamini
 and small ants praying on eggs, small larvae and adults.
                                                                                                     ©  Stav Talal
 5HFRUGHG  KRVWSODQWV  Poaceae (Gramineae) -  Avena
 sterilis,  Brachypodium distachyon*,  Cynodon dactylon,
 Digitaria  sanguinalis*,   Echinochloa  colonum*,
 Hyparrhenia hirta (Israel, Cyprus),  Poa bulbosa,
 P.  trivialis* - illustr. 2,  Piptatherum holciforme*,
 P.  miliaceum,  Setaria adhaerens,  S. verticillata*,   Turkey, Gaziantep S.Nizip, 1200-2000 m. 1.7.1998, Leg. R Leestyans
 Andropogon distachyos [?],  Urochloa mutica (?)
 (Benyamini, 2017h). Cyperacea:  Cyperus alternifolius*    P. p. persica (Christoph, 1887)
 (Benyamini, 2013c).

 * hostplants in the breeding experiment of DB discussed above.






 © Samir Hamza                                 © Dubi Benyamini                                   © Dubi Benyamini

 126                                                                                                          115




 2Butterflies of the Levant danaidae satyridae.indd   126  12/30/2021   4:26:07 PM  2Butterflies of the Levant danaidae satyridae.indd   115  12/30/2021   4:25:34 PM
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