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 Hyponephele wagneri (Herrich-Schäffer, [1846])    Oriental Steppe Brown



 Possibly the rarest butterfly in the Levant, with only one
 confirmed record to date (on 30.8.2012) from the east
 of Haydarlar village (320 m), south of Hassa, NE Hatay,
 six km from the Syrian border. The discoverer, Dr Ali
 #
 Atahan (Antakia city, Hatay), has made numerous visits   ?
 to the area each year, but has not repeated his success.
 Similarly, on 25.9.2013, DB visited the biotope – a
 strange isolated flat, volcanic rocky plain with little soil or
                                 ©  Adam Warecki
 vegetation – where only a few butterflies were observed,   ©  Martin Wiemers
 21603-BRACHA-PARPAR - 21603-BRACHA-PARPAR | 4 - A | 22-01-02 | 10:39:03 | SR:-- | Magenta
 21603-BRACHA-PARPAR - 21603-BRACHA-PARPAR | 4 - A | 22-01-02 | 10:39:03 | SR:-- | Yellow
 including Maniola telmessia  ʆ  DQG Pieris rapae, but a
 #21603-BRACHA-PARPAR - 21603-BRACHA-PARPAR | 4 - A | 22-01-02 | 10:39:03 | SR:-- | Black
 21603-BRACHA-PARPAR - 21603-BRACHA-PARPAR | 4 - A | 22-01-02 | 10:39:03 | SR:-- | Cyan
 careful full-day search of the biotope and nearby hills up
 to 600 m, did not yield another wagneri. The source of
 the singleton (a migrant?) is possibly the northwestern                           DGXOW  1    2    3    4    5    6    7    8    9   10  11  12
 8
                        HJJ
 Syrian mountains. In 2016, Noushig Zarikian (a PhD                         lar v a
                  pupa
 student at Yerevan Inst. of Zoology, Armenia), published
 a comparative study of the butterflies collected during
 2009-2012 expeditions in various  places in Syria (incld.
 Aleppo). Zarikian (2016) included  H.  wagneri but did
 not appreciate that this represented the first record   ©  Adam Warecki  ©  Adam Warecki        ©  Martin Wiemers
 for Syria (pers. comm. to DB). This handsome species
 has an elongated upf apical ocelli, a conspicuous unh
 white post discal band, and sharply pointed, scalloped
 hindwing outer margin.
 %LRORJ\


 )OLJKW  SHULRG  on the wing from early June to late July
 (when males perish); females aestivate until the end of
 August/early September, when they resume flying and
 oviposit. The sole Levant specimen was photographed in
 late August and possibly represents a post-aestivation
 female, seeking egg-laying sites (Atahan et al., 2018: 92
 & pers. comm. to DB).                     ©  Martin Wiemers
 /LIH  KLVWRU\  nothing is known about its early stages.
 Univoltine, confined to rocky slopes with sparse vegetation
 (Hesselbarth et al., 1995(2): 815 fig 1). Recorded nectar
 sources are flowers of  Centaurea spp. (Hesselbarth et
 al., 1995(2): 831). Their biology should be similar to
 their congeners, where the L1 overwinters and develops                                          ©  Martin Wiemers
 slowly, feeding on the freshly growing grasses, pupating
 in spring and emerging in early summer.

 5HFRUGHG  KRVWSODQWV  Poaceae (Gramineae) – various
 grasses.



 'LVWULEXWLRQ                    © Adam Warecki               © Dubi Benyamini

 TL: “von der Südseite des Ararat” (S Ararat Mt, E Turkey).
 Turkey, Armenia, NW Syria, N Iraq, Iran, W Afghanistan,
 Pakistan, Baluchistan (?) and Turkmenistan(?). The
 nominotypical ssp. flies in N Levant region of Turkey and
 Syria (Atahan et al., 2018: 92; Eckweiler & Bozano 2011:
 52; Tshikolovets, 2011: 349; Zarikian, 2016).








 ‹ 2ÀU 7RPHU                     ©  Adam Warecki              ©  Martin Wiemers                  ©  Martin Wiemers

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 2Butterflies of the Levant danaidae satyridae.indd   60  12/30/2021   4:22:51 PM  2Butterflies of the Levant danaidae satyridae.indd   53  12/30/2021   4:22:29 PM
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