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                   Melitaea didyma  (Esper, 1778)               Spotted Fritillary                                                                                                         :LQJVSDQV   The average wing-span of the three                 21603-BRACHA-PARPAR - 21603-BRACHA-PARPAR | 13 - B | 22-01-02 | 12:34:18 | SR:-- | Cyan
                                                                                                                                                                                           main populations in Galilee, N Samaria and S
                                                                                                                                                                                           Samaria desert revealed no substantial differences
                   M.  didyma, in its ssp. libanotica Belter, 1934, together   at HaTanur, N Israel, gregarious yellow parasitoid                                                          – see table 1.  Males * 35.3 - 43.5 mm (n=27) are on
                   with M. acentria Lukhtanov, 2017 (that replaced M. persea   larvae, probably  Cotesia lycophron (Nixon) (Braconidae:                                                    the average smaller than the females ** 39.4 – 48.1
                   Kollar, 1849 /  M.  montium Belter, 1934 in the Levant)   Microgastrinae), erupted and spun white cocoons.                                                              mm (n=26) by 3.95 mm.
                   and  M.  israela n. sp. Benyamini, Tomer & Coutsis 2021   Some days later, adults of  Catolaccus craticeps (Masi)
                   (present book) belongs to the didyma species-complex   (Chalcidoidea: Pteromalidae) emerged from these                                                                  &RORXUV  Graves (1925a) described the colour of
                   (didyma super-species), a group of closely related taxa   cocoons. A female of  C.  craticeps must have accessed
                   recently and still in isolation & speciation process in their   the Cotesia cocoons and oviposited into them (thus being
                   southern ecotone / distribution limit in the Levant. Some   a pseudohyperparasitoid with respect to  M.  didyma).
                   researchers regard them as fully separated species while   Twenty one  M.  didyma caterpillars pupated successfully,
                   others see them as subspecies of M. didyma. M. didyma   but four of the pupae (19%) did not produce adults but
                                                                                                                                                           DGXOW                           7DEOH    Average wingspans of Israeli Melitaea arduinna in its three known biotopes [mm].
                                                                                                                                                                                   2
                                                                                                                                                                                   2
                                                                                                                                                                            0
                                                                                                                                                                                1  12
                                                                                                                                                                           1
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                                                                                                                                                                                1
                                                                                                                                                                               1
                                                                                                                                                                               1
                                                                                                                                                                                1
                                                                                                                                                                                  1
                                                                                                                                                              6    7    8    9   10  1
                                                                                                                                                           5
                                                                                                                                                           5
                                                                                                                                                              6
                                                                                                                                                                  7
                                                                                                                                                              6
                                                                                                                                                              6
                                                                                                                                             1
                                                                                                                                                                     8
                                                                                                                                                                                  1
                                                                                                                                                 2
                                                                                                                                                       4
                                                                                                                                                       4
                                                                                                                                                    3
                                                                                                                                                                            0
                                                                                                                                                                     8
                                                                                                                                                                  7
                                                                                                                                                                        9
                                                                                                                                                                        9
                   libanotica is a local species in our area resembling  M.   instead darkened in the head and thoracic region, and                         HJJ  1    2    3    4    5    6    7    8    9   10  11  12  *- Smallest male 35. 3 mm – Tsfat. Largest male 43.5 mm Aviv stream.
                                                                                                                                                  lar v a
                   syriaca Rebel, 1905, but differing by lack of black spots   three days later solitary larvae of a parasitoid Tachinidae            pupa                                 **-Smallest female 39.4 mm - Rosh-Pina. Largest female 48.1 mm Kohav HaShahar
                   forming an arc at the junction of the discal and postdiscal   (Diptera) erupted from each. These were probably
                   areas on the hindwing upper side. Individuals may vary in   Erycia sp. (Eryciini) that are all specialist parasitoids of
                   colour from deep to light orange, as well as in the density   Melitaeinae. In SW Europe another  Cotesia species,  C.
                   of black spots, often being almost spotless. The lighter   hispanica (Oltra & Falco), has been described (Oltra  et
                   forms resemble M. acentria. It appears that in N Israel and   al., 1996; as Protapanteles) as a parasitoid of M. didyma,
                   the southern Anti-Lebanon/Mt Hermon range  M.  didyma   and is common in that area. Benjaminia fumigator Aubert                                                         7DEOH    (modified Table 1 of Benyamini & Russell, 2019) – Wingspans of male M. arduinna from
                   does not fly together in the same biotopes with M. acentria   (Ichneumonidae: Campopleginae) is a local parasitoid of                                                   Russia, Greece & Israel (n = number in sample, wingspans in mm). The minimum Israeli mean
                                                                                                                                                                                           male wingspan is closer to the Russian nominotypical ssp., while the maximum is closer to the
                   and M. israela and that the three of them do not share the   M.  didyma in S. France (Shaw, 1977). In Poland a pupal                                                    Grecian ssp. rhodopensis and the mean (average) is closer to the Russian value.
                   same LHPs. Specimens of the first (spring) brood are larger   parasitoid Brachymeria femorata (Chalcididae) (det. Dick     Holoptype (01)            Allotype (12)       “The freshest female…taken…on the Jebel Suwada
                   than those of the summer broods. Female carries the male   Askew) hatched from a wild collected pupa of M. didyma                                                        nr. Salt, Transjordania (as)..nearly answering to
                   in cop. (Lafranchis et al., 2015: 474).           (Adam Warecki pers, comm. to DB). (This parag. was edited                                                               Ridgway’s “orange cinnamon” (“Colour Standards,
                   Rated as EN (Endangered) in the Israeli red list of butterflies   by Mark Shaw in pers. comm. to DB).              Melitaea arduinna levantina n. ssp. Benyamini & Russell 2021  Pl. XXIX).”. OT picked up the darkest and lightest
                   (Renan et al., 2022 (in prep.))                                                                                                                                          specimens in DB collection (n=53) and found that
                                                                     5HFRUGHG  KRVWSODQWV  LQ  WKH  /HYDQW  Scrophulariaceae                                                                the darkest orange appeared in a male with Raw
                                                                     -  Anarrhinum orientalis [Larsen, 1974: 125 (Lebanon);                                                                 Sien-Nap+ (Pl. 13 L10 *) and the lightest orange a
                   %LRORJ\                                           Antirrhinum majus [M] Benyamini, 2010a: 130 (Israel).                                                                  female near Yucatan Cathay-Mexican+  French Y (Pl.
                                                                                                                                                                                            12 K9 *) – both illustr.
                   )OLJKW  SHULRG  March to September, 300-800 m in Israel                                                                                                                  *- colours per Maerz and Paul Dictionary of Color (1950).
                   (Benyamini, 2010a: 130 & field notes); May, July, sl-1200+   'LVWULEXWLRQ
                   m in Lebanon where it may overlap with M. acentria (ex M.                                                                                                                Since its discovery in Israel in 1980 DB and his
                   persea) or even with M. israela (Larsen, 1974: 124-125);   TL: Uffenheim, Bavaria (Germany). Distributed from the                              Israel, Mt. Amiad, Bred. D. Benyamini,   colleagues observed, photographed, collected and
                   May-July, sl-1400 m (Mudar Salimne Syrian butterflies web   Atlas Mts. of N Africa to S and C Europe, and eastward to                                  slightly ab.      bred thousands of specimens from all three main
                   site – last accessed 26 April 2021); May, 650-1250 m W   Turkey, Syria, Lebanon, N Israel (absent from Cyprus, Jordan           “Normal” European females                populations in the Galilee, N Samaria and S Samaria
                   & S Syria (Sanetra, 1999); April-end of June, 900-1400   and Sinai), to Russia and C Asia. Several spp. & sspp. have                                                     but never recorded even one dark local female,
                   m, W & S Syria (ten Hagen, 1996 & 1998*; ten Hagen &   been described from the Levant; two that are accepted by                                                          thus substantiating the decision to describe it as
                   Eckweiler, 2000; ten Hagen pers. comm. to DB); 1545-  us (Benyamini, Tomer, Pittaway & Coutsis) appear in this                                                           a new southern ssp. of  Melitaea arduinna – see
                   1678 m in Al-Lazzab reserve Syrian Anti-Lebanon (Zarikian   Vol III, others appear to be synonyms:  Melitaea didyma                                                      figs of dark European females for comparison with
                   & Ghrejyan, 2018). (*- the Joubbe end of June, 1900 m   didyma (Esper, [1778]); TL: Uffenheim, Bavaria (Germany)                                                         various Levantine specimens from the lightest to the
                   record is suspected to be the new species M. israela)   – S Turkey.  Melitaea didyma  libanotica Belter, 1934; TL:                                                       darkest.
                                                                     Bcharré, Kanisah, Zahalta, N Lebanon - Syria, Lebanon and
                   /LIH KLVWRU\  polyvoltine. The female lays pale green eggs   N Israel. The southern distribution limits are in Nahal Aviv                                                'HVFULSWLRQ RI Melitaea arduinna levantina n. ssp.
                   in small batches on the leaves of the hostplant. The newly   580 m 33°04’30’’N 12 km N Safed (Tsfat) Upper Galilee,      Georgia          Russia            Greece       Benyamini & Russell 2021;  (Benyamini, 2022b).
                   hatched larva is black with orange bristles and an orange   Israel (Benyamini, 2010a: 130). Ten-Hagen collected it in                                                    DB decided to choose the types from the populations
                   line on its sides. The mature larva is up to 23 mm in   Dimas, NW Damascus, Syria at 33°35’N and in Damascus                     Dark melanic females                    around Mt Cana’an - Tsfat, N Israel  (Nahal Aviv (Aviv
                   length, the ground colour is grey with fine black lines, and   (det. John Coutsis, Athens). Sanetra (1999) collected                                                     stream)), Trashei Tsfat, Mt Cana’an, Mt Amiad &
                   along the entire length of the body are grey and orange   “Melitaea didyma didyma” in 11-12 May 1989 at “Syr.                                                            Rosh-Pina – several are illustr.), based on: a. This
                   branched spines with black hairs. The head is orange with   3….S of Qanawat, W–Foot of Jebel Hauran”. This Syrian                                                        is a protected species by law in Israel since 2008
                   black hairs. The true legs are orange with black claws; the   record, about 95 km S Damascus is doubtful because ten-                                                    while the other two populations in the west bank are
                   prolegs are white with black soles. Larvae usually leave   Hagen’s Melitaeas from “Reschidae” (Rushaydah) 23.5 km                                                        not protected and suffer from sever overgrazing, b.
                   the hostplant to pupate on nearby plants and stones. The   ESE of Qanawat in a similar altitude of 1400-1500 m are                                                       The main biotope in Trashei Tsfat is within a nature
                   suspended pupa is 13 mm long, white and spotted with   actually M. acentria (det. John Coutsis, Athens).                                                                 reserve c. The total area of its distribution around
                   black and yellow. Bred pupae hatched at the end of August                                                                  Serbia          Russia       Kratovo district  Tsfat is at least one order of magnitude larger than
                   after a seven to eight days (DB breeding notes, Israel). As                                                                                                              each of the Samarian populations.
                   with several other  Melitaea spp. the last summer brood
                   immature L3 larvae form a hibernaculum within curled                                                                                                                     7\SH PDWHULDO
                   dead leaves secured by silk. After overwintering, feeding                                                                                                                Males (n=11) – 01 Holotype, wingspan 42.30 mm.
                   resumes in spring and may proceed through seven larval                                                                                                                   Labelled as: “Nahal Aviv (Printed) [/] 12.4.1985,
                   moults, as reported for France and possibly elsewhere by                                                                                                                 *DOLO  ʇ   3ULQWHG   > @  ,65$(/   3ULQWHG   > @  /HJ   'XEL
                   Lafranchis et al., (2015: 472).                                                                                                                                          Benyamini (Printed)” and Holotype (red label) – illustr.
                                                                                                                                                                                            3DUDW\SHV males (no’s 02 – 11): 02 & 03 same data
                   3DUDVLWRLGV  three of 25 (12%)  M.  didyma  larvae found                                 © Dubi Benyamini                                                      © Dubi Benyamini  as the holotype, 04 same data as the holotype (the
              206                                                                                                                                                                                                                        195
           2Butterflies of the Levant danaidae satyridae.indd   206                                            12/30/2021   4:30:02 PM  2Butterflies of the Levant danaidae satyridae.indd   195                                   12/30/2021   4:29:33 PM
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