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Hipparchia pellucida  Stauder 1923                 Anatolian Grayling                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                        21603-BRACHA-PARPAR - 21603-BRACHA-PARPAR | 7 - B | 21-12-30 | 11:34:48 | SR:-- | Cyan   #21603-BRACHA-PARPAR - 21603-



 Flies in a variety of biotopes: light woodland, oak and
 pine forests, sometimes showing a preference for densely
 foliated isolated trees of Crataegus, Pyrus or Prunus spp.
 and sometimes in fruit and  Pistacea groves. In the heat
 of the day, H. pellucida rests on the ground in the shade
 of trees, rarely on trunks or in rock crevices.  Adults have
 been observed nectaring on flowers of Anchusa, Carduus                                           © Dubi Benyamini
 Globularia, Notobasis, and various Compositae spp. When
 threatened they flew into spiny bushes or high branches                          DGXOW  1    2    3    4    5    6    7    8    9   10  11  12
 1
 01
 10
 2
 1
 11
 9
 3
 2
 1
 9
 5
 4
                       HJJ
 3-5 m over the ground to find shelter. Local migration of                 lar v a
          pupa
                                DGXOW
                                             9
                                          8
                                                 0
                                                1
                                5
                            4
                                      7
                                   6
 hundreds adults was observed in early June 1984 SE of                         HJJ  1    2    3    4    5    6    7    8    9   10  11  12
                       lar v a
 8OXGHUH  úLUQDN   +HVVHOEDUWK et al., 1995(2): 905).                  pupa
 %LRORJ\                                                                                          © Dubi Benyamini
 )OLJKW SHULRG  late May to October, 550-1900 m with mid-
 summer aestivation (Hesselbarth  et al., 1995(2): 906).
 200-900 m; May-June in Hatay (Atahan et al., 2018: 79) and
    0D\      : 1XUGDøL 6 *D]LDQWHS DW      P  %HQ\DPLQL
 & Tomer, 2002).
 /LIH KLVWRU\  univoltine. Eggs are laid singly in early autumn,   Israel, Jerusalem, 1.5.1941
 possibly from September. The fresh yellowish-white eggs
 are low barrel-shaped, relatively small (0.7 mm in diameter,
 0.9 mm in height) and have 24-30 longitudinal ribs. Egg
 colour changes to grey after 8-10 days before hatching. L1
 remains inactive until the growth of fresh grasses induced                                       © Moshe Laudon
 by autumn rains. When feeding resumes, larval colour
 changes to green, with longitudinal brown, white and grey
 stripes appearing as the larva matures feeding at night.
 Pupation takes place the following spring 0.5-1 cm in the
 soil, pupae are light brown, lying bottom up and the adult
 eclosed after two weeks* (Hesselbarth  et al., 1995(2):
 906; Jutzeler et al., 1998). (*- usually four weeks in other   Israel, Hermon, 1650m. 16.6.1973
 Levant Hipparcia spp. bred by DB).
 Early stages are possibly similar to those of its syster
 species Hipparchia cypriensis.
 5HFRUGHG KRVWSODQWV  Festuca spp., Poa annua and other     © Ali Atahan
 Poaceae (Gramineae) spp.                                                                          © Moshe Laudon
 'LVWULEXWLRQ          Jordan, Wadi Dana, 695 m. 23.5.1998
 TL: “Terter [Mir-Baschir]” Azerbaijan). Greece (Ikaria &
 Lesbos Islands), the Crimean Peninsula (Ukraine), S
 7XUNH\  0DUDû  0DUGLQ  8UID  *D]LDQWHS DQG +DWD\   6\ULD
 Transcaucasia, N Iraq, Kurdistan and Iran (unrecorded from
 Lebanon, Cyprus, Jordan and Sinai). (Tuzov  et al., 1997:
 240; Zarikian, 2016). A single male was collected by Uri
 Pick on 23 May 1966 in Mt Adir (1008 m) N Israel 2.5 km
 S Lebanon border, at the edge of a Mediterranean forest.
 No more specimens of this isolated relict population were
 observed or collected in N Israel and the whole C Levant,
 and is now considered locally extinct. In the Israeli red list
 of butterflies H. pelucida is rated as Not Applicable (NA) - no
 breeding population in Israel (Renan et al., 2022 (in prep.))

   © Mehmet Atahan                                © Dubi Benyamini                                   © Ali Atahan

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