Melitaea diamina

False heath fritillary
Female upperside
Underside
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Family: Nymphalidae
Genus: Melitaea
Species: M. diamina
Binomial name
Melitaea diamina
(Lang, 1789)
Synonyms[1]

Melitaea diamina, the false heath fritillary, is a butterfly of the family Nymphalidae.

Subspecies

Subspecies include:[2]

  • Melitaea diamina alpestris Fruhstorfer, 1917
  • Melitaea diamina badukensis Alberti, 1969 (Caucasus)
  • Melitaea diamina codinai Sagarra, 1932 (Spain)
  • Melitaea diamina diamina (Lang, 1789)
  • Melitaea diamina erycina (Lederer, 1853) (Altai)
  • Melitaea diamina erycinides Staudinger, 1892
  • Melitaea diamina hebe (Borkhausen, 1793)
  • Melitaea diamina vernetensis Rondou, 1902

Distribution and habitat

This species is widespread in central and southern Europe (from northern Spain, southern and eastern France, Italy and eastwards into southern Scandinavia and Bulgaria), southern Siberia, north-eastern China, southern Ussuri, Korea and Japan.[2][3] These butterflies live in damp flowery meadows, woodland margins and rides from low to alpine levels up to 2200 m.[4]

Description

Melitaea diamina has a wingspan of 36–42 mm. Females are larger than males.[5][6] This medium-sized species is highly variable in extent of black markings and in the diversification of ground colour on the upperside of the wings. The upper side of the wings usually is black brown, with yellowish-orange ground colour and white chequered fringe. On the upperside of the hindwings there are very heavy dark markings. Sometimes it may be uniformly dark brown. The underside of the hindwings shows a submarginal series of white half moons and a few bands of creamy-white and orange checkers.[4][7]

This species is rather similar to Melitaea varia, Melitaea parthenoides, Melitaea aurelia, Melitaea britomartis, Melitaea deione, Melitaea asteria and Melitaea athalia.[4]

Biology

This species usually has a single brood from May to July depending on the altitude. In some warmer regions it may have a second generation.[4] Caterpillars feed on Valeriana officinalis, Valeriana sambucifolia, Valeriana dioica, Valeriana wallrothii, Filipendula ulmaria, Veronica chamaedrys, Plantago lanceolata, Melampyrum pratense, Melampyrum nemorosum, Polygonum bistorta and Patrinia species.[2] Pupation occurs on the host plants near to the ground. Adults fly from May to September.

Bibliography

  • Ebert, G. & E. Rennwald (1993). Die Schmetterlinge Baden-Württembergs, Bd. 1., Stuttgart (Verlag Eugen Ulmer), pp. 508–513.
  • Mitchell Beazley (1981). The Mitchell Beazley Pocket Guide to Butterflies. Mitchell Beazley, London. p 76.
  • Schweizerischer Bund FÜR Naturshutz [eds.] (1987). Tagfalter und ihre Lebensräume. Arten – Gefährdung – Schutz, Fotorotar AG, Egg, Zurich. pp. 220–221.
  • Tom Tolman, Richard Lewington - Guide des papillons d'Europe et d'Afrique du Nord, Delachaux et Niestlé, ( ISBN 978-2-603-01649-7)

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.