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Maniola cypricola (Graves, 1928)        Cyprus Meadow Brown                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                 21603-BRACHA-PARPAR - 21603-BRACHA-PARPAR | 5 - B | 22-01-02 | 10:39:03 | SR:-- | Cyan   #21603-BRACHA-PARPAR -



 An endemic species, widely distributed throughout all parts
 of the island of Cyprus, although less commonly reported
 from the Mesaoria Plain (EJ, pers. obs.); Lethargic in flight
 and sedentary by nature, M. cypricola is very common in
 many types of habitat in late spring and early summer,
 when mating takes place. Males are short-lived, while
 females aestivate in the shade and cooler temperatures of
 bushes or in overgrown, dry watercourses during summer.
 Arrested ovarian maturation contributes to a delay in egg-
 laying until the autumn rains, when  cypricola   ʆʆ   FDQ
 again be readily seen. Female cypricola were recorded at
 64 (49%) of 131 sites (from sl to 1000+ m) across the
 island in early-mid October 2017 (EJ, pers. obs.), belying the                          DGXOW  1  1    2    3    4    5    6    7    8    9   10  11  12
 2
 10

 3
   3    4

 10
 1
 1
 12
 1
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                       HJJ
 occasional reference (in an overall European context) to the                 lar v a  © Adam Warecki  © Adam Warecki  © Adam Warecki
          pupa
 species being a rare endemic. Cistus creticus, Centaurea
 aegialophila,  C.  hyalolepis,  Echium angustifolium and
 Limonium sinuatum are among favoured nectar plants.
 Rare examples of post-aestivation puddling by female M.
 cypricola were presented in John & Dennis (2019).

 %LRORJ\
 )OLJKW  SHULRG  usually April-October, but may be seen
 earlier or later.
 /LIH  KLVWRU\  univoltine, as with all  Maniola spp. Eggs
 are white, barrel-shaped to truncated conical, with 13-
 14 prominent ribs (Thomson, 1987) and are laid singly
 on grass stems in the autumn. Measuring ca. 1 mm on
 eclosure, the young larva diapauses or feeds slowly on
 warmer days throughout winter, reaching maturity in
 March. The fully-grown larva is ca. 30 mm in length, head
 and body colour are light green, with a darker mid-dorsal
 green line and with numerous short white setae covering
 the body; at the anal end is a small fork. Pupae are formed
 low on the hostplant and vary in colour from green with
 brown markings, to brown with white markings (Martin   © Ali Atahan                              © Adam Warecki
 Gascoigne-Pees, pers. comm.).
 5HFRUGHG KRVWSODQWV  Poaceae (Gramineae) – Poa spp.


 'LVWULEXWLRQ

 TL: “S Cyprus”. M. cypricola has long been regarded as an
 endemic species, although some, e.g. Tshikolovets (2011:   © Christodoulos Makris
 340) consider cypricola to be a ssp. of M. telmessia.
 However, Olivier (1993: 145), commenting on wing
 PRUSKRORJ\   VWDWHG  ¶7KH  ʇ  RI  M.  cypricola can easily be
 VHSDUDWHG IURP WKH ʇ RI M. telmessia …’. Compared with
 other Maniola spp., Thomson (1976, 1987) and Kudrna (in
 prep.) noted differences in male and female genitalia of
 cypricola, while Grill et al., (2004) stated, ‘On basis of the
 valvae, however, M. chia and M. cypricola can be clearly
 distinguished from the other  Maniola.’ These findings
 continue to lend support to specific rank, under which it
 remained so named in Wiemers  et al., (2018). In recent
 years, DNA analyses based on mitochondrial DNA (DNA
 barcoding) have led to inconclusive results regarding the
 relationships within European  Maniola, and additional
 molecular data is required before any conclusions can be
 GUDZQ  9ODG 'LQFć  SHUV  FRPP  WR (-      © Eddie John  © Ali Atahan                            © Dubi Benyamini


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