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Melitaea acentria Lukhtanov (2017)             Hermon Fritillary                                                  [/] Rhopalocera (Printed) [/] VIAL   M. a. acentria - males  M. a. arabica - males  M. persea sargon - male
                                                                                                                                     No. (Printed) [/] 9542 (Printed)’ and
                                                                                                                                     ‘T. Larsen Coll. (Printed) [/] BMNH                               4                     3
                   Endemic to the Lebanon and Anti-Lebanon mountain   %LRORJ\                                                        2009-43 (Printed)’ and ‘Paratype’
                   ranges in Israel (its TL), Lebanon and Syria. Wolfgang                                                            (Yellow label printed) in col. NHMUK;
                   ten-Hagen found relict population in the eastern slopes                                                           PT 04 - forewing length 19 mm,
                   of Jabal al-Druze, S Syria above 1400 m – illustr. 1, this   )OLJKW  SHULRG  second week of May at 1400 m to mid-
 #                                                                                                                                   labelled as ‘SAUDI ARAB. [/] RIYADH
                   isolated population is the dwindling bridge from the TL   August at 2800 m Mt Hermon S Anti-Lebanon ridge,        [/] 8 iii 1978 [/] PITTAWAY leg’ and                            01 Holotype         Paratype RH 386
                   to the Jordanian remnants of ex “M.  didyma sargon”   Israel (Benyamini, 1990a: 128 as  Melitaea persea           ‘NHMUK 012824335 (Printed)’ and
                   (Hemming, (1932) – illustr, 2 & a rare female (leg. ten-  montium); June 1900 Anti-Lebanon as  M.  didyma var.    ‘T. Larsen Coll. (Printed) [/] BMNH
                   Hagen) - illustr. 3) and further ~1300 km SE to the endemic   persea (Nicholl, 1901); 27 June 1931 at “Djebel Makmal   2009-43 (Printed)’ in col. NHMUK;
                   C Saudi Arabian  Melitaea acentria arabica  Benyamini,   in 2600-2800 m” (~ 10 km NE Bscherré) N Lebanon as M.    7\SHV - )HPDOHV
 21603-BRACHA-PARPAR - 21603-BRACHA-PARPAR | 13 - B | 22-01-02 | 12:34:18 | SR:-- | Magenta
 21603-BRACHA-PARPAR - 21603-BRACHA-PARPAR | 13 - B | 22-01-02 | 12:34:18 | SR:-- | Yellow
 #21603-BRACHA-PARPAR - 21603-BRACHA-PARPAR | 13 - B | 22-01-02 | 12:34:18 | SR:-- | Black
 21603-BRACHA-PARPAR - 21603-BRACHA-PARPAR | 13 - B | 22-01-02 | 12:34:18 | SR:-- | Cyan
                   Pittaway and Coutsis 2021 n. ssp – see next entry. Since   didyma ab. wullschlegeli Oberthür, 1909 (Zerny, 1932);   PT 05 - (allotype) forewing length
                                                                                                                                                                         Anti-Lebanon, Mt.Hermon
                   2008 protected by law in Israel. The first three specimens   May 1927-34 at Bwarij (Bouarej, 1400+ m, Mt Lebanon   23.7 mm Diriyah, 17.4/1980 and    2-5.6.1864,Tristram expedition  Saudi Arabia, Riyadh, Diriyah, 450 m  M. a. ´acentriaµ - females
                                                                                                                                                                                                 25.4.1980 leg. A.R.Pittaway
                   RI  WKLV  VSHFLHV   WZR  ʇʇ  DQG  RQH  ʆ   QRZ  LQ  WKH  +RSH   range, C Lebanon) as M. saxatilis ssp. montium (Ellison &   ‘Paratype’ (Yellow label printed) in   J.Coutsis, prep. no. 5867  J.Coutsis, prep. no. 5754
                   Museum, Oxford University), were collected between 2-5   Wiltshire, 1939); May-June  (first brood) and July-August   col. DB – illustr, 7;                                          4                      2
                   June 1864, during the 1863-1864 expedition of Henry   (second brood), above 1500 m to “high levels in the         PT 06 - forewing length 22 mm,             5
                   Baker Tristram, when his party rode up Mt Hermon from   Lebanon and Anti-Lebanon ranges”, Lebanon (Larsen,        labelled as ‘17.APR.1980 [/] DIRIYAH
                   ‘Rasheiya’ (Rachaiya el Foukhar), Syrian Anti-Lebanon   1974: 125-126 as Melitaea persea montium); 29 June        [/] C. SAUDI ARABIA (Printed) [/]
                   (Tristram, 1865: 602-610; Benyamini, 2019d, Benyamini   1996,  1900-2000 m 15-20 km W Qarah N Syrian Anti-        COLL. A. R. PITTAWAY (Printed)’ and
                   & Hogan, 2020 – illustr 4.). It was described by Lukhtanov   Lebanon (ten-Hagen, 1998 – as  M. (didyma)  persea   ‘NHMUK 012824337’ (Printed) and
                   (2017) from 37 holotype & paratypes* collected from   montium & pers. comm. to DB - illustr. 6); 1 May 1995 in    ‘T. Larsen Coll. (Printed) [/] BMNH                             02 Paratype           Paratype
                   early May to early July between 1750 and 2050 m on   “Reschide” (Rushaydah) 800-1400 m and Busan 1500             2009-43 (Printed)’ in col. NHMUK.                                                ´M. persea sargon” Hemming, 1932
                   the SW slopes of Mt Hermon, S Anti-Lebanon mountain   m both at the eastern slopes of Jabal al-Druse of Syrian                                                                                     Jordan, Wadi Rajil 20.4.1927
                                                                                                                                                                                                                         leg. l. K. Lockhart
                   range. Differences in genitalia and DNA clearly separated   Hauran (det. John Coutsis Athens Greece and ten-Hagen   6L[ DGGLWLRQDO SDUDW\SHV  Ln ABRI coll.
                   it from Turkish-Iranian  M.  persea, defining  acentria   pers. comm. to DB); 1828-2602 m in Al-Lazzab reserve    Nairobi, Kenya (Steve Collins pers.                                                     6
                   as a new species. Based on DNA analysis, Lukhtanov   Syrian Anti-Lebanon, Syria (Zarikian & Ghrejyan, 2018);      comm. to DB) all leg. A. R. Pittaway:
                   concluded that  M.  acentria is the result of speciation,   19 April 1993 between Na’ur (Amman) and the Dead      Males: PT 07 Diriya, 17.4.1980; PT   Israel, Mt.Hermon, 1600-1700 m,  Saudi Arabia, Al Ghat, 680 m
                   1-1.6 MYA, of hybrids of M. persea that became isolated   6HD        P   -RUGDQ    ʆ  OHJ   WHQ +DJHQ   SHUV   FRPP    08 Al Ghat, 24.4.1980; PT 09 Diriya,              OHJ  2ÀU 7RPHU  30.3.1983 leg. A.R.Pittaway
                                                                                                                                                                                                 J.Coutsis, prep. no. 5753
                                                                                                                                                                          J.Coutsis, prep. no. 5751
                   from the main northern stock in the Levant ‘refugia’   to DB – illustr. 3); 20 April 1927 Wadi Rajil, NW Jebel    25.4.1980. Females: PT 10 & 11
                   (hybrid speciation). He also figured ‘M. didyma liliputana’   Kurma (“20 miles E. of Qasr Azraq”), N Jordan on the   Diriya, 25.4.1980; PT 12 Al Ghat,
                                                                                                                                                                                                                         M. a. ´acentriaµ
                   (presented in this book as  M.   israela n. sp.)  that flies   south-eastern periphery of Jabal al-Druze, Hauran, Syria   25.4.1980.                                                               Jordan, W Na’ur, Amman 500 m.
                   together with M.  acentria. Lukhtanov showed them to    +HPPLQJ       DV D ʆ SDUDW\SH RI M. didyma sargon                                                                                         19.4.1993  leg. Wolfgang ten-Hagen
                   be genetically separate, but failed to compare it with M.   ssp. nov. – illustr. B&W in Pls. XV & XVI and illustr 2).   *-to be deposited in the national
                   didyma libanotica (Belter, 1934) that flies lower down at                                                         insect collection of the kingdom
                   the bottom of the Rift Valley and the east-facing slopes of   /LIH  KLVWRU\  univoltine with a questionable partial   of Saudi Arabia pending a formal
                   Ramim - Naftali Ridge, N Galilee and S Lebanon, breeding   second brood, wherever the dominant LHP (Plantago      request to the Steinhardt Natural
                   on a completely different LHP (see entry for this species).   lanceolata - illustr. 7) is green and available to larvae.   History Museum, Tel Aviv Israel).
                   However,  acentria and  israela sometimes hybridize   Two fertile females that were collected on 5 June 2018,
                   (illustr. 5), suggesting that  M.  didyma was possibly the   at the TL between 1750 and 1850 m, laid batches of   This is an isolated Melitaea population
                   other ancestral origin of acentria. Resembles M. didyma   eggs under lower leaves of  P.  lanceolata  . The first   from central Saudi Arabia occurring
                   and M. trivia, differing from M. didyma mainly by the arc   female laid batches of 17 and 19 eggs, 10 mm apart    along the Jabal Tuwaiq/Tuwayq
                   of orange spots on the unh, which are reduced, more   under the same leaf; the second female also laid two        Escarpment. The genitalia group
                   separated and sometimes individually encircled in black.   batches, of 7 and 48 eggs, 10 mm apart, under a nearby   it with  M.  acentria  from southern
                   Also differs by its biotope preferences, with M. acentria   leaf. The light green glossy eggs are 0.6 mm in diam.,   Lebanon and the Anti-Lebanon   9           ‹ 'XEL %HQ\DPLQL  8    ‹ 7RQ\ 3LWWDZD\  1    ‹ 2UL )UDJPDQ 6DSLU
                   usually found at higher altitude, never below 1400-1500   slightly elongated upwards, with 26-28 indistinct ribs   mountain chains. Comparison with   Hostplant: Teucrium orientale  Hostplant: Teucrium oliverianum  Hostplant: Teucrium pruinosum
                   m (Larsen, 1974; DB, pers. obs.). Differs from M. syriaca   at the upper section of its height (four eggs examined).   M. a. acentria is made in Table 1:   Israel, Mt Hermon, Anti-Lebanon  C. Arabia, Tuwayq Hills  Jordan, Edom
                   (ex  M.  trivia) by the lack of black spots forming an arc   The top of the egg is flat with small protrusions. Before
                   between the discal and postdiscal areas on the uph.   hatching, the egg turns grey with a black top. L1 hatched
                   Males are typically reddish (Pl 4 A12, close to Terracotta,   in the lab. after five days, eating the upper part of the   7DEOH     FRPSDULVRQ VXPPDU\     Criteria          0HOLWDHD DFHQWULD DFHQWULD  0HOLWDHD DFHQWULD DUDELFD
                   per Maerz & Paul, 1950), individuals sometimes varying   eggshell or sometimes all. L1 is 1.5 mm long, yellowish,
                   in the intensity of black spotting. Females are usually   with seven longitudinal rows of long black hairs emerging   M. a. acentria LV VPDOOHU  ÁLHV DW KLJKHU             High Middle Eastern Mountains   High Desert in Central Saudi – Arabia
                                                                                                                                     elevations and later in season.
                   larger and lighter: between Amber-glow to Burma (Pl 12   from tiny grey protrusions over the larval skin. As it starts                                      Biotope             1400 – 2800 m          450 – 1150 m
                   I10) and Spruce (Pl 12 K8), sometimes having a greyish   nibbling at the LHP epidermis, producing indentations,   The male upper side is reddish-orange                      nd
                   ground colour. These southern Levantine  populations   its colour turns to greenish-light grey. The heart-shaped   compared with light rustic-orange in     Flight Period   2  week of May to Mid August  February - April
                   are isolated from M. persea of SE Turkey by ca. 500 km   head is a glossy dark brown with white and black hairs.   M. a. arabica.                        Annual broods          One, rarely second  Two, each brood flies shortly
                   (Hesselbarth et al., 1995(3): 827).               L1 are gregarious, sometimes developing beneath a               The female  arabica upper side is       Host Plants       Plantaginaceae: 3ODQWDJR DWUDWD   Lamiaceae: 7HXFULXP ROLYHULDQXP
                                                                                                                                                                                               Plantaginaceae: 3ODQWDJR DWUDWD
                                                                                                                                                                                                            lanceolata
                                                                                                                                                                                               Lamiaceae: 7HXFULXP RULHQWDOH
                                                                     loose protective web. At L2, develops from 2.7 to 5.5 mm        lighter and underside is cream-white,                     Lamiaceae: 7HXFULXP RULHQWDOH
                                                                     in length and at L3 to 7.5 mm. L3 is beautifully decorated      while in  a.  acentria the underside is   Average Forewing length in mm  Male  Female  Male   Female
                                                                     with eight longitudinal rows of cones in the first four         yellowish.
                   *- All types of this protected species were first deposited in the Zoological   segments, followed by 13 further rows. Cones vary in               n - number of measured specimens  ( n=17    ) 16.7  ( n=16    )  17.8  ( n=4    )  18.1  ( n=2    )  22.8
                   Institute of the Russian Academy of Science (St. Petersburg) (Lukhtanov   size, and are white, yellow or orange, usually with black   It is evident that the light sand-    Color upperside  - per Maerz &   PL4 H12  PL12 K8/i10  PL11 H8-H9  PL10 i7
                   et al., 2017), but were requested to be returned to the Steinhardt Natural                                        like underside of  M.  a.  arabica has   Paul, 1950,  Dictionary of Color
                   History Museum, Ramat Aviv, Tel Aviv, Israel, where fourteen paratypes   spines. The prolegs are white with black crochets. The   excellent criptic and adaptic colors   Color underside  - per   fw    Orange: PL12 J12    Orange: PL12  Orange: PL11 J7-J10   : Orange
                   are presently deposited (Ariel-Leib Friedman, Tel-Aviv University, pers.   head is orange with black mandibles, eyes and hairs.   with regard to its desert biotope when   Maerz & Paul, 1950,   i11/J10        PL10 D10
                   comm. to DB).                                     Most L3 spread over the LHP base, singly or up to three         sitting on the ground with closed   Dictionary of Color   hw      White: PL11    White: PL12  White: PL11 E2/J10    White: PL10
                                                                     larvae together, prior to overwintering. Others hibernate       wings.                                                   F2/G4; PL12 E1  E1/F1                    C2

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           2Butterflies of the Levant danaidae satyridae.indd   198                                            12/30/2021   4:29:39 PM  2Butterflies of the Levant danaidae satyridae.indd   203                                   12/30/2021   4:29:58 PM
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