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                   highlighted a neglected complication; the type specimen   forms). However to our surprise and just before Vol III went                                                                                                                 21603-BRACHA-PARPAR - 21603-BRACHA-PARPAR | 2 - A | 21-12-30 | 11:34:47 | SR:-- | Cyan
                   of  alcippoides (Moore, 1883) is also  orientis (Aurivillius   to print a fresh f. dorippus female appeared on 25 Nov.   2
                   1909)! The year 2016 was the best ever recorded for   2021, after the first heavy rains of winter 2021/22 near
                   Levant’s  orientis; On 25 March 2016 in the garden of   Dan Sharon’s butterfly nursary (Mashtelat Haparparim)
                   Hilton Marsa Alam Nubian Resort on the western coast of   near Merkaz Meirav on hwy 4, 7 km N Fureidis and 8.5 km
                   the Red Sea; seven eggs were found by DB on C. acutum.   NNE of Ma’ayan Tzvi fishing park were summer 2020’s
                   All were bred successfully to five females and two males   dorippus population flourished.
                   that emerged between 21-22.4.2016. One female (14.3%)
                   was the first recorded Egyptian orientis. The other typical   -  f. transiens (Suffet 1900) as an ab. of Danaus dorippus
                   Red Sea Egyptian females were crossed with males from   with additional three white spots at the tip of the FW
                   Binyamina-Burj C Israel; their 20 males and 22 females   underside, was described from “Deutsch-Ostafrica bis
                   offspring hatched in May-June (last one 16.6.2016) two   Arabien”. Smith (2014: 169, Tab. 3.6) treats it as
                   specimens – 4.7% (a male and a female) were orientis. 12   “heterozygous phenotype” and marked its distribution in
                   larvae that were found by DB in the end of March 2016 on   the Hybrid zone (Fig. 2.34) at Kenya, Tanzania, Ethiopia,
                   Calotropis procera in Faza’el N Jerico Lower Jordan Valley   S Eritrea, Djibouti, Yemen and Dhofar. While breeding
                   (possibly laid by migrants from the south) were bred to F1   Israeli  dorippus in summer 2020 DB got also  transiens
                   that continued to F2 and by 21 May 2016 emerged about   and semi-transiens among its offspring, blurring the limits
                   160 F2 offspring, four of them (2.5%) were orientis.  On   of these two ab.-form/semispecies (illustr. 3). A female D.
                   9 August 2016 in  C.  acutum field near Alexander River,   c. f. transiens  collected in the late 1980’s at the Hula
                   HaSharon park C Israel two orientis were found among 22   Lake by Movshovitz brings up to three all the records of
                   adults (9.1%). The other 20 f.  chrysippus were taken for   dorippus  /  transiens in the 20’s century in the Levant
                   breeding. Their offspring started to hatch on 31 August   (Benyamini 2015c: 86, 87 & Fig. 2 – j, k).
                   2016 and until 4 Sept. 39 adults emerged, seven of which
                   (17.9%) were orientis the highest proportion ever recorded   -  f. klugii (Butler 1886) described as Limnas klugii n. sp.
                   in the Levant.                                     from Somalia “South of Berbera” is a brown  dorippus;
                                                                      being a natural hybrid of f. dorippus and f. chrysippus. Its
                   -  f. dorippus (Klug 1845) that dominates north E Africa/   status and distribution in the hybrid zone as described by
                   the horn of Africa extends eastwards across S Red Sea Bab   Smith (2014: 169, Tab. 3.6 and Fig. 2.34) are identical to
                   al-Mandab straight to S Arabian Yemen, Dhofar (13.6 % of   f. transiens – see above. It appeared in C Levant together
                   the population) becoming rare in N Oman & Musandam   with f.  dorippus in August – September 2020 when a
                   (3.7%) and W UAE (Al Ain) (Feulner et al., 2021, Hitchings,   wild worn dorippus-klugii female was taken by DB on 15
                   2021 & Verovnik pers. comm.) – see Fig. 1. It has never   august 2020 for breeding and specimens of f. klugii that
                   been reported from Western Arabia (Pittaway, 1985 & pers.   appeared among its offspring proved that it mated with
                   comm.). Hayward (1922, 1923) did not record it during   chrysippus (illustr.7).
                   his stay between 1919 and 1922 in Aswan, Upper Egypt.
                   Only one specimen ever recorded in S Egypt in March-April
                   1928 by the Egyptian coleopterist  Anastase Alfieri in Gebel
                   Elba, SE Egypt and has not been recorded there again by
                   Hassan & Fadl (2000) nor in later publications by Gilbert
                   & Zalat (2007) or Larsen (1990).  It is extremely rare in
                   the Levant with one record in the 19th century from Beirut
                   by Lederer (1858); accepted as questionable by Ellison &
                   Wiltshire, (1938) and Larsen (1974) as possible but very
                   rare while Zorkot (2016) totally ignored it. During the whole
                   20th century it was recorded only three times in Israel:   Fig 1 – West – east decline in adundance of f. dorippus among 513 total chrysippus records by: Bertram
                                                                      Thomas (1930), Harrison Institute (1975-1977 Oman-Dhofar Flora & Fauna Surveys), Larsen (1975-
                   The author collected the first single male on the banks of   1980) and Hitchings (1993-1997), (Hitchings, 2022 in prep.)
                   Kishon River, Haifa on 11 Oct. 1969 (illustr. 3), Movshovitz
                   photographed a male at Yesud HaMa’ala, S Hula Lake,
                   upper Jordan Valley on 30 Oct. 1986 and collected a
                   male there in the late 1980’s, now in coll. Steinhardt N.H.                                                                                                                                                               © Ofir Tomer
                   Museum, Tel Aviv. Thirty three years elapsed until the
                   next Levantine record; a single male collected by Danny
                   Sharon on 31 May 2019 at Giv’at Ada, Binyamina, C Israel.
                   It possibly remained criptic somewhere in C Levant until   Table 2 - H[LVWLQJ ´IRUPVµ LQ ORFDO SRSXODWLRQV
                   14 August 2020 when several specimens were found in   *1 - ab. candidata Hayward, 1923 from Aswan is not included    *2 - Aswan, Hayward, 1923
                   the fishing park of Ma’ayan Zvi, S.L., about 500 m from the   *3 - Gebel Elba S. Egypt (Wiltshire, 1948)    *4 - one record - Wadi Tlach 1400m S Sinai 28.5.1974
                                                                      (Benyamini, 1984)      *5 - one record - Wadi Rum (Banyamini, 2015c)      *6 - Wadi Dana 455m,
                   Mediterranean coast at 32°34’59’’N : 34°55’06’’E. This   Edom, Jordan 17/04/1998 (Banyamini, 2002a)      *7-  Ellison & Wiltshire, 1939    *8 - Lederer, 1858

                   local  dorippus/transiens/klugii population that did not   form  chrysippus  aegyptius  orientis  pallidus  griseus  alcippus  alcippoides  albinus  semi-albinus  dorippus  transiens  klugii   n
                   expand beyond Ma’agan Michael – Ma’ayan Zvi artificial   country y
                                                                        Kenya  12     1      2  3  3  12  15  6  13  67
                   large fish pools, existed for two months until 24 Oct.     18%     1%     3%  4%  4%  18%  22%  9%  19%
                                                                        Djibouti                         6        6
                   2020 (last photograph in the wild). It did not survive the                           100%
                                                                        Ethiopia  4  2                   1  4  7  27
                   cooling autumn temperatures and its genes disappeared      15%  7%                    52%  26%
                                                                       Israel 1969   *1  8  1  3  5  3   1        21
                   from E Mediterranean  chrysippus gene-pool because   Israel-f1 2020  *2  38%  5%  14%  24%  14%  3  3  1  13
                                                                                   1
                                                                               4
                                                                                      1
                   not a single specimen survived the 2020/2021 winter   Israel-f2 2020  *3  31%  8%  8%  23%  23%  8%  320
                                                                                      2
                                                                                                               5
                                                                                                            3
                                                                                                         87
                                                                              221
                                                                                   2
                                                                              69%
                                                                                      1%
                                                                                  1%
                   and 2021 season started with the  chrysippus normal**   Table 1 - QXPEHU RI EUHG VSHFLPHQV DQG     LQ '%·V ODE    27%  1%  2%
                   dorippus-free population. (*-with white and dark autumn   1 - Israel JS/RST Oct-Nov/1969 in Coll. DB, not all f. chrysippus collected.
                                                                          2 - Israel JS/RST Aug-Sep/2020 offspring from one wild-collected female.
                                                                          3 - Israel JS/RST Sep-Oct/2020 cross of above offspring with local typical f. chrysippus.
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