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North American Ecology (US and Canada)

provided by North American Butterfly Knowledge Network
Erebia discoidalis is resident in much of Canada and in Alaska (Scott 1986). Habitats are open dry grassy areas and moist prairie, often on gravelly knolls, and north to the edge of arctic tundra where it may be in boggy areas. Also found in Asia. Host plants are grasses, known host species are Poa canbyi, P. Glauca, P. alpina. Eggs are laid on the host plant singly. Individuals overwinter as fourth instar larvae and possibly as pupae. There is one flight each year with the approximate flight times May 15-June 15 in the more southern part of their range, June 1- July 15 in the Arctic (Scott 1986).
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Leslie Ries
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Leslie Ries

Conservation Status

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Not of concern.
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Cyclicity

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One yearly flight, peaking in May.
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Distribution

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Alaska south to northern Montana along the Rocky Mountain front ranges, east to southern Quebec (Scott 1986). Occurs throughout Alberta, but is absent from most of the prairie region (Bird et al 1995).
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General Description

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"Eyepsots absent. Upperside dark brown with a large, diffuse dark-ochre patch in the forewing median area. Underside similar, but with a light brownish-grey frosting on outer half of hindwing and forewing apex. The only other Erebia in Alberta that lacks eyespots is magdalena."
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Habitat

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Moist meadows and fens.
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Life Cycle

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"The barrel-shaped eggs are laid singly on the hostplant, and hatch in 9 - 11 days (Bird et al. 1995). Larvae, which likely overwinter, are cream-coloured with dark, diagonal lines. One of the first butterflies to emerge in the spring along with Boreal Azures."
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Trophic Strategy

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Larval hosts in Alberta remain to be confirmed. Larvae eat bluegrass (Poa) species, including lawn grass in captivity (Bird et al. 1995) and Canby's Bluegrass (Poa canbyi) in Manitoba (W. Krivda in Hooper 1973). Scott (1986) also lists P. glauca and P. alpina.
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Erebia discoidalis

provided by wikipedia EN

Erebia discoidalis, the red-disked alpine, is a member of the subfamily Satyrinae of family 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] In Seitz it is described thus - E. discoidalis Krb. (= lena Christ.) (37 h). The forewing narrow, with the apex rounded, the costal margin being brownish grey and striated with whitish grey and brown. The dull brown disc broadly bordered with dark chocolate anteriorly and posteriorly, this border being narrow on the distal side, the dark apex of the wing feebly dusted with grey. The forewing beneath is marked as above, the border of the brown central area is somewhat broader, the apex and distal margin densely dusted with bluish grey. The hindwing beneath dark brown from the base to the middle and thinly dusted with whitish grey, the outer half being blue-grey with small dark brown striae. At the apex of the cell there is an oval whitish greyspot and at the costal margin 2—3 somewhat smaller ones. — Central and Eastern Siberia (Amurland); besides in Arctic America. Graeser found the species to be very rare at Podrofka in June; from the worn condition of the specimens obtained he concludes that the insect is possibly more plentiful earlier in the year.[3]

Adults are on wing from May to late July depending on location.[4]

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. ^ Georg Eiffinger. in Seitz. A. ed. Band 1: Abt. 1, Die Großschmetterlinge des palaearktischen Faunengebietes, Die palaearktischen Tagfalter, 1909, 379 Seiten, mit 89 kolorierten Tafeln (3470 Figuren)Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  4. ^ Red-disked Alpine (Erebia discoidalis), Butterflies of Canada

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Erebia discoidalis: Brief Summary

provided by wikipedia EN

Erebia discoidalis, the red-disked alpine, is a member of the subfamily Satyrinae of family 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. In Seitz it is described thus - E. discoidalis Krb. (= lena Christ.) (37 h). The forewing narrow, with the apex rounded, the costal margin being brownish grey and striated with whitish grey and brown. The dull brown disc broadly bordered with dark chocolate anteriorly and posteriorly, this border being narrow on the distal side, the dark apex of the wing feebly dusted with grey. The forewing beneath is marked as above, the border of the brown central area is somewhat broader, the apex and distal margin densely dusted with bluish grey. The hindwing beneath dark brown from the base to the middle and thinly dusted with whitish grey, the outer half being blue-grey with small dark brown striae. At the apex of the cell there is an oval whitish greyspot and at the costal margin 2—3 somewhat smaller ones. — Central and Eastern Siberia (Amurland); besides in Arctic America. Graeser found the species to be very rare at Podrofka in June; from the worn condition of the specimens obtained he concludes that the insect is possibly more plentiful earlier in the year.

Adults are on wing from May to late July depending on location.

The larvae feed on Eriophorum species.

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