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                    Lasiommata megera  (Linnaeus, 1767)                          Wall Brown                                                                                                                                                               21603-BRACHA-PARPAR - 21603-BRACHA-PARPAR | 3 - A | 22-01-02 | 12:34:17 | SR:-- | Cyan
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                    A hilltopping and territorial species, males may defend                                                  3       )OLJKW  SHULRG  DQG  PLJUDWLRQ  WUDFNV  northwards migrating
                    their territories day after day; several may congregate                                                          specimens are seen from spring months of late February
                    at hilltops. Generally uncommon and local, and scarcer                                                           in the southern Negev to April-May in N Israel. After flying
                    than L. maera, with which it is one of the earliest satyrids                                                     north in the Jordan Valley they proceed through Izrael Valley
                    to emerge in spring. Males perch or patrol along tracks                                                          to Haifa and around Mt Carmel “cape” fly southwards along
                    awaiting females, fly-glide with wings open in V shape, or                                                       the E Mediterranean coast. Their southwards return flights    © Dubi Benyamini          © Dubi Benyamini
                    bask in wait with wings fully open. Males have a strong                                                          are observed from September to November. However, in
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                    diagonal sex brand on their upf, and begin courting head                                                         our warming up climate, permanent colonies may become                                         100
                    to head, flapping their wings and dispersing androconial                                                         established in favourable, frost-free areas such as the Jordan
                    scales and pheromones towards the female antennae.                                                               River – Arava Rift Valley where they fly year round with reduced
                    Adults sometimes spend nights under overhanging                                                                  activity in the winter.
                    rocks. This is a cold resistant species; adults may survive
                    in -3°C, larvae in -8°C and pupae in ice (Lafranchis et                          DGXOW                           /LIH  KLVWRU\   polyvoltine. Freshly born “virgin” males have to
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                    al., 2015: 568-569; Thomas & Lewington 2014: 242).                          HJJ  1 1 1 1  1    2    3    4    5    6    7    8    9   10  11  12  collect pyrrolizidine alkaloids (PA) that are found on withered   © Stav Talal
                                                                                  lar v a
                                                                             pupa
                                                                                                                                     parts of plants in the families  Boraginaceae, Asteraceae,
                                                                                                                                     Fabaceae and Apocynaceae spp.. “These phytochemicals are                                      11
                    %LRORJ\                                                                                                          partially metabolized by the males…and are converted into
                                                                                                                                     dihydropyrrolizines which are used as pheromones during
                    )OLJKW  SHULRG  February (or earlier) to November,                                                               courtship behaviour”. It was also suggested that the pure PA
                    depending on altitude & weather. The author has                                                                  stored in the adult’s body serve them as additional protection
                    recorded  megera  from the Anti-Lebanon peak at 2814                                                             against predators (Edgar et al., 1979; Smith, A., 2014) PA is
                    m in June 1974, at Hulata (70 m, N Sea of Galilee) in                                                            also transmitted by both males and females to the eggs. Males                              © Stav Talal
                    the lowest point at the upper Jordan valley also in June,                                                        transfer it to the females by seminal infusion, and females
                    and at Gitit (300 m) W Bank, Samarian Desert in April; In                                                        that collect PA themselves coat the eggs with PA protecting
                    Hatay (common), sl to 2000 m, March-October (Atahan                                                              it against predators (e.g. ants) and egg parasites (e.g. the
                    et al., 2018: 101); Cyprus, sl (early February to early                                                          chalcidoid wasp,  Trichogramma spp.), (Bezzerides  et al.,
                    1RYHPEHU  D IUHVK ʇ  (-  SHUV  REV    WR 7URRGRV VXPPLW                                                          2004). On 29 Nov. 2021 DB observed several females sipping
                    at 1950 m (Makris, 2003: 260); Al-Lazzab reserve Syrian                                                          fluids from Pulicaria dysenterica (Asteraceae); this interesting
                    Anti-Lebanon 1828-2602 m (Zarikian & Ghrejyan, 2018).                                                            plant contains over 40 different bioactive components (not
                                                                                                                                     PAs) including glucosides, flavonoids, phenolic acid, etc.
                    /LIH KLVWRU\  polyvoltine. Eggs are laid singly, sometimes                                                       (Cádiz-Gurrea  et al., 2019; Benyamini, 2022a) that function                            © Dubi Benyamini
                    in pairs, on grasses growing in shady places, or ”in                                                             in addition to the PAs for similar purposes - see egg defence
                    clusters on roots or leaves of grasses” (Thomas &                                                                in Vol I. Eggs are laid singly, usually on the underside of the
                    Lewington, 2014: 241). The eggs are 1 mm in height,                                                              hostplant’s leaves.  On 16 May 2015 a female laid an egg
                    spherical and greenish-white, changing to yellowish                                                              among yellow aphids on Asclepias curassavica – is it a defence
                    towards eclosion. L1 hatches after one week and eats                                                             strategy for eggs? (DB breeding notes). The eggs are 1.25 mm
                    the eggshell, is 2.5 mm long, yellow, hairy and with a                                                           in height, pale-green and upper-narrowed barrel-shaped. The
                    brown head, spotted black; body colour changes to green                                                          eggshell is consumed by the newly hatched larva, which is 3
                    when feeding commences. L5 is 25 mm long, green with                                                             mm in length, grey with a black head. Larvae feed non-stop
                    light green dorsal and subdorsal longitudinal lines and a                                                        between moults and in maturity are 45 mm long, banded with
                    white lateral band, feeding in late afternoon and at night.   Jordan, Wadi Dana,  600 m. 23.5.1998               black and white and with yellow spots along its body. Behind   © Dubi Benyamini  © Dubi Benyamini  © Dubi Benyamini
                    The suspended pupa is 15 mm long, green (sometimes           L. m. emilyssa  Verity, 1919                        the head, on the body and near the tail, are three pairs of
                    brown) with 6-7 pairs of small white projections along the                                                       characteristic fleshy filaments, black with red at the base. The   /DUYDO  FDQQLEDOLVP   every African Queen’s breeder
                    back, hatches after 10-12 days in the summer but one                                                             spiracles are marked with black. The usual larval coloration   meets this phenomenon that when LHPs are in short
                    month in winter in temperatures of 9-12°C. Overwinters                                                           is typically aposematic, bearing warning patterns alerting of   supply the large larvae start feeding on the young
                    as a larva, in warm areas it continues to grow slowly                                                            toxicity, but occasionally this is replaced by other forms: the   ones. But it seems that they like consuming fresh
                    throughout the winter (Lafranchis et al., 2015: 568-569).                                                        spots are reduced and appear on a grey body ground colour  pupae even more and not necessarily when they are
                                                                                                                                     (illustr. 10). A second form is extremely rare: the larva is green  hungry; wondering larvae before pupation may eat
                    5HFRUGHG KRVWSODQWV  Poaceae (Gramineae) – Cynodon                                                               with no black and white stripe, and with a white stripe and yellow   fresh pupae, post-moulting larvae are sometimes
                    dactylon, Dactylis glomerata, Pennisetum cladestinum,                                                            spots along the sides -illustr. 11. Makris (2003) illustrated a   consumed (BD breeding notes).
                    Piptatherum miliaceum,  Poa spp., [C], Schedonorus                                                               third form, where the ground colour of the entire dorsal surface
                    arundinaceus [?]. Cyperaceae – Cyperus rotundus [?].                                                             of the larval body is a purple-grey-brown. On 15 August 2019   :LQWHU GLDSDXVH  a direct impact of climate warming
                                                                                                                                     in Beit Arye (C Israel) at noon time with external temperature   up is overwintering of the African Queen in Israel.
                                                                                                                                     of 37°C two pre-pupal pendulous “J” shaped  thermoregulated   While chrysippus could do it until recently only in the
                    'LVWULEXWLRQ                                                                                                     their bodies’ temperature by turning the lower “leg” towards   warm Jordan River -- Arava Rift Valley enclaves, and
                                                                                                                                     the sun, changing to “L”- shape to reduce their silhouette and   the Israeli population was depending also on spring
                    TL: Austria and Denmark. Widely distributed from N                                                               heat absorption (DB, 2018e). The suspended pupa is 22 mm   migrants from the south, we face now a different
                    Africa to most of Europe (up to latitude 60° (Higgins &                                                          long, green, white or pink with golden spots matching pupation   situation: When females lay their last eggs in the fall
                    Riley, 1973: 227)), Russia, Iran, Turkey, Cyprus, Syria,                                                         base – i.e. green on plants. In paired flight, the female is   at the Mediterranean coastal plains the following
                    Lebanon, Israel (south to Susya at Hebron Mt), and                                      © Dubi Benyamini         carried by the male. But in East Africa DB photographed in cop.   low winter temperatures are below the survivability
                    Jordan (south to Petra). Absent from Sinai. Three ssp.   emilyssa (Verity, 1919), TL: Bosporus (Turkey) – Levant;   pairs where females carried the males and have no explanation   threshold and they perish with their eggs, small larvae
                    have been reported from the Levant: L. m. transcaspica   and ssp. iranica Riley, 1921, TL: “Kizil-Robat, Mesopotamia;   why it is different in the northern and southern hemispheres   and even pupae while the final instars larvae can
                    (Staudinger, 1901) TL: “Tura; Hyrc[ania]” (Iran);  L. m.   Karind Gorge and Harir, N.W. Persia” (Iran).          – i.e. African dominant females versus Levantine/European   withstand and survive low temperatures.
                                                                                                                                     dominant males.
              48                                                                                                                                                                                                                          33
           2Butterflies of the Levant danaidae satyridae.indd   48                                             12/30/2021   4:22:06 PM  2Butterflies of the Levant danaidae satyridae.indd   33                                    12/30/2021   4:21:17 PM
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