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Melitaea phoebe (Denis & Schiffermüller, 1775)   Knapweed Fritillary                                     12



                    The  Melitaea phoebe species complex has been the   /LIH  KLVWRU\  bivoltine to trivoltine. Eggs are laid in
                    subject of recent studies and its systematic position   clusters of dozens on the underside of the hostplant’s
                    clarified (van Oorschot & Coutsis, 2014; Russell &   lower leaves. The egg is cream, becoming yellow, oval-
                    Tennent, 2016; Russell, 2018). The most widespread   shaped with 15 longitudinal ribs, hatching after 6-20
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                    ‘Knapweed-type’ fritillary in the Levant is  Melitaea   days. The young larvae are gregarious and live in a silken
                    "telona"  Fruhstorfer, 1908 TL. Jerusalem, Israel (see   web. As with adults, larval coloration is variable but all                                                            ©  Adam Warecki
                    species’ complex entry). M. phoebe is restricted to the   instars have a glossy black head. At L3, final brood
                    north-western Levant strip. Flies in open grassy areas,   larvae overwinter in small groups among dry leaves of
 21603-BRACHA-PARPAR - 21603-BRACHA-PARPAR | 12 - A | 21-12-30 | 11:34:48 | SR:-- | Magenta
                    moist biotopes, open forests and forest meadows. This   the hostplant, resuming feeding the following spring and
 21603-BRACHA-PARPAR - 21603-BRACHA-PARPAR | 12 - A | 21-12-30 | 11:34:48 | SR:-- | Yellow
 #21603-BRACHA-PARPAR - 21603-BRACHA-PARPAR | 12 - A | 21-12-30 | 11:34:48 | SR:-- | Black
 21603-BRACHA-PARPAR - 21603-BRACHA-PARPAR | 12 - A | 21-12-30 | 11:34:48 | SR:-- | Cyan
                    complex super-species is widely distributed, with  M.   dispersing in the final instar prior to pupating near the
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                    phoebe and M. ornata / M. telona complex often in mixed   ground. Pupae hatch after 2-4 weeks (Lafranchis et al.,                         HJJ  1    2    3    4    5    6    7    8    9   10  11  12
                                                                                                                                                  lar v a
                    populations. Across its distribution and influenced also   2015: 464-465; Warecki, 2010: 111 & pers. comm. to            pupa
                    by altitude and season, populations may vary in colour   DB).
                    from orange to reddish-orange, sometimes rusty or
                    white and brown, with extensive black markings. Tends   5HFRUGHG KRVWSODQWV  Acanthaceae – Acanthus syriacus;              2nd gen.                2nd gen.
                    to be local; males are territorialists, puddlers and feed   Asteraceae –  Carduus,  Centaurea & Onopordum spp.,                                                               ©  Wolfgang Wagner          ©  Wolfgang Wagner
                    on animal droppings. In his pre-military training at the   Cynara syriaca [?] - illustr. 2, Onopordum carduiforme [?]
                    former RAF St Jean base N. Acre, Israel, DB recorded   and Scolymus maculatus [?]; Plantaginaceae - Plantago
                    phoebe in the spring/summer of 1958 and 1959. First   spp. in Lebanon and Hatay (Larsen, 1974: 123; Atahan                                                                       © Dubi Benyamini
                    brood adults appeared in 6-8.4.58 and 27-30.4.59.   et al., 2018: 69).
                    Larvae of the second brood (black-headed L5s) were
                    found on  Acanthus syriacus ***(Acanthaceae)  in mid-                                                                                   1
                    May 1959 (Benyamini, 1990a: 126), it pupated and   'LVWULEXWLRQ                                                       Israel, 3 km N of Acre,   Israel, 3 km N of Acre,
                                                                                                                                                                  St Jean sl. 26.5.1958
                                                                                                                                          St Jean sl. 25.5.1959
                    hatched between 25.5–1.6.1959, confirming the past
                    occurrence of phoebe in northern coastal Israel – illustr.   TL: Vienna, Austria.  M. phoebe has a patchy isolated                                                                                        ©  Wolfgang Wagner
                    1. RAF St Jean is now a ruined and “erased” camp with   ecological distribution from W France and Spain, across
                    limited access; however, in mid-May 2018, and early   Europe and the Middle East to Mongolia and W Siberia.                                                                           possibly the real LHP of M. phoebe in this biotope
                    April 2021 no A. syriacus* were observed among Cynara   In the Levant, it reaches its southernmost limit of
                    syriaca** -illustr. 2 (common & dominant),  Scolymus   distribution in coastal northern Israel, 3 km N of Acre,
                    maculatus (common), Centaurea iberica** (uncommon   Lat. 32º57’51’’ N, a southern extension from NW Hatay
                    on the beach) and Onopordum carduiforme** (rare) all   along the Levant coast; from sea level to 2000 m in the
                    (Asteraceae); are these additional hostplants of phoebe   Lebanon and N Anti-Lebanon Mt chains.
                    in coastal NE Mediterranean?  DB still does not know if
                    the newly described polyvoltine Melitaea klili Benyamini,                                                                     Turky, Silitke, Aydinik, 250 m. 22.4.1984
                    2021  that flies only 25 km east of the western Galilee                                                                                                                                                          2
                    coast line in the wet biotopes of Karmiel valley can reach                                                                                                               ©  Wolfgang Wagner                © Dubi Benyamini
                    the coast and overlap with M. phoebe.
                    *-A. syriacus appear in the distribution map of Avinoam
                    Danin’s website (Flora of Israel online) as present on the
                    Mediterranean coast N Acre, supporting DB LHP’s first
                    determination.
                    **- known as LHPs of M. phoebe / M. ornata elsewhere.
                    Onopordum bracteatum Boiss. & Helder was reported
                    as an hostplant of  Melitaea ornata (telona) in N                                                                            Turky, Silitke, Aydinik, 250 m. 22.4.1984
                    Peloponnesus by Lafranchis (2019), where “a last-instar
                    larva was observed eating a basal leaf” of this LHP.                                   ©  Wolfgang Wagner
                    *** - Dr. Ori Fragman-Sapir, the curator of the Jerusalem
                    botanical garden opined that if DB identified A. syriacus
                    in the 1950’s based on the leaves rosette  (rather than                                                                                                                                                      © Eddie John
                    its flowers) than he possibly mis-identified it with the
                    similar rosette of Scolymus maculatus.
                    %LRORJ\
                    )OLJKW SHULRG  on the coast, from early April to early July
                    in two successive broods, at higher elevations from mid-
                    June to early August. A third ‘less numerous’ brood was
                    reported from Lebanon by Larsen (1974: 123) in August/
                    September; June, single record in Hatay (Atahan et al.,
                    2018: 69).
                                                                                                             © Eddie John                                                    © Dubi Benyamini                                    © Eddie John
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