Erebia discoidalis

Red-disked alpine
Scientific classification
Kingdom:Animalia
Clade:Euarthropoda
Class:Insecta
Order:Lepidoptera
Family:Nymphalidae
Genus:Erebia
Species: E. discoidalis
Binomial name
Erebia discoidalis
Subspecies

Four, see text

Synonyms
  • Erebia lena Christoph, 1889

Erebia discoidalis, the red-disked alpine, is a member of the Satyrinae subfamily of Nymphalidae. It is found in North America from eastern Quebec, through northern Ontario (south to Sudbury), and the northern Prairies to northern British Columbia, the Northwest Territories, Yukon, and Alaska. It reaches just into the northern U.S. between Michigan and Montana, and also occurs in Asia, where it has been recorded from the Chukot Peninsula to the eastern Sayan Mountains and Amur. The habitat consists of large, open, grassy bogs and other areas with acidic soils.

The wingspan is 35–44 mm. The wings are brownish black without eyespots. The forewings have a large chestnut-red patch both above and below. The underside of the hindwings is mottled grey and brown.[2] Adults are on wing from May to late July depending on location.[3]

The larvae feed on Eriophorum species.

Subspecies

  • E. d. discoidalis
  • E. d. lena Christoph, 1889 (tundra of northern Siberia, Chukot Peninsula, Russian Far East)
  • E. d. yablonoica Warren, 1931 (Transbaikalia, Amur)
  • E. d. mcdunnoughi dos Passos, 1940 (Alaska)

Similar species

References

  1. "Erebia Dalman, 1816" at Markku Savela's Lepidoptera and Some Other Life Forms
  2. BAMONA
  3. Red-disked Alpine (Erebia discoidalis), Butterflies of Canada


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