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Biology

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As the green-veined white feeds on wild crucifers, it is not a pest of cultivated cabbages like some related white butterflies (5). This is a double-brooded species (3). The first generation of adults emerge in April. The females lay their pale eggs singly on the undersides of leaves of small plants; the first brood females lay their eggs in May, and the caterpillars emerge after one or two weeks (4). The caterpillars feed on leaves for around one month and then pupate whilst attached to the stems of the foodplant (3). After two weeks, the second generation of adults emerge. The eggs of this generation are laid in July or August, and the pupae hibernate through the winter, with the adults emerging the following year (3). In very warm years a third generation may be produced, with the adults flying in September (4).
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Conservation

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Conservation action has not been targeted at this widespread species.
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Description

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The green-veined white is a familiar common butterfly (4). Despite the English name, the yellowish-green veins on the undersides of the wings are variable in colour, and provide excellent camouflage when this butterfly is at rest amongst leaves (4). In both sexes, the upper surfaces of the wings are yellowish white and the forewings have blackish tips. Males have a central dark spot on the forewings, whereas females have two (2). The caterpillar is well camouflaged with a green body covered with small hairs and fine black dots. Each black spiracle is surrounded by a yellow patch (3).
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Habitat

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Typically found in damp vegetation where the foodplants occur (4). The foodplants are wild crucifers including garlic mustard (Alliaria petiolata), Hedge mustard (Sisymbrium officinale), water-cress (Rorippa nasturtium-aquaticum), cuckoo flower (Cardamine pratensis) and related species (3). Habitats include woodland margins, damp meadows, hedgerows, moorland and ditches (4).
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Range

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This common butterfly has a wide range throughout Britain, with the exception of Shetland (4) (3). It is widespread throughout Europe, but is absent from some islands in the Mediterranean. It extends into North Africa and across Asia and is also found in North America (4).
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Status

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This widespread species is not threatened. It is not listed under any conservation designations (4).
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Threats

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Although this species is not threatened at present, it has become less numerous in many parts of its British range. This is thought to be caused by the fact that many of its preferred habitats such as lush, damp meadows have been drained or destroyed over the last few decades. Furthermore, this butterfly's need for damp conditions indicates that it may suffer if climate change causes drier and warmer summers (4).
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Associations

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Animal / parasitoid / endoparasitoid
larva of Epicampocera succincta is endoparasitoid of larva of Pieris napi

Animal / parasitoid / endoparasitoid
larva of Phryxe vulgaris is endoparasitoid of larva of Pieris napi

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North American Ecology (US and Canada)

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Resident across Canada, much of the western United States, and the US Northeast and mid-west (Scott 1986). Habitats are SHADED STREAMSIDES. Host plants are usually herbaceous. Host plants include many species, but mostly in one family, CRUCIFERAE. Eggs are laid on the host plant singly. Individuals overwinter as pupae. There is a variable number of flights based on latitude each year with one flight occuring approximate JUN1-AUG1 in the northern and higher altitude parts of the range; two or three spring-summer flights elsewhere, and a first flight occuring FEB1-APR1 in coastal California. (Scott 1986).
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Leslie Ries
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Leslie Ries

Green-veined white

provided by wikipedia EN

The green-veined white (Pieris napi) is a butterfly of the family Pieridae.

Appearance and distribution

A circumboreal species widespread across Europe and Asia, including the Indian subcontinent, Japan, the Maghreb and North America. It is found in meadows, hedgerows and woodland glades but not as often in gardens and parks like its close relatives the large and small whites, for which it is often mistaken. Like other "white" butterflies, the sexes differ. The female has two spots on each forewing, the male only one. The veins on the wings of the female are usually more heavily marked. The underside hindwings are pale yellow with the veins highlighted by black scales giving a greenish tint, hence green-veined white. Unlike the large and small whites, it rarely chooses garden cabbages to lay its eggs on, preferring wild crucifers. Males emit a sex pheromone that is perceptible to humans, citral,[1] the basic flavor-imparting component of lemon peel oil.[2]

Some authors consider the mustard white and West Virginia white of North America to be conspecific with P. napi [3] or consider P. napi to be a superspecies. Despite this, the American butterflies, unlike P. napi, cannot successfully use garlic mustard as a host plant. Females will lay eggs on it, mistaking this non-native species for a compatible native mustard, resulting in the death of the offspring.[4] Classification is also an issue concerning the European dark-veined white.

Life cycle and food plants

The eggs are laid singly on a wide range of food plants including hedge mustard (Sisymbrium officinale), garlic mustard (Alliaria petiolata), cuckooflower (Cardamine pratense), water-cress (Rorippa nastutium-aquaticum), charlock (Sinapis arvensis), large bitter-cress (Cardamine amara), wild cabbage (Brassica oleracea), and wild radish (Raphanus raphanistrum), and so it is rarely a pest in gardens or field crops. The caterpillar is green and well camouflaged. When full grown it is green above with black warts, from which arise whitish and blackish hairs. There is a darker line along the back and a yellow line low down on the sides. Underneath the colour is whitish-grey. The spiracular line is dusky but not conspicuous, and the spiracles are blackish surrounded with yellow. There is extensive overlap with other leaf-feeding larvae of large and small whites in some wild populations (e.g. in Morocco). It is often found feeding on the same plant as the orange tip but rarely competes for food because it usually feeds on the leaves whereas the orange tip caterpillar feeds on the flowers and developing seed pods. Like other Pieris species it overwinters as a pupa. This is green in colour, and the raised parts are yellowish and brown. This is the most frequent form, but it varies through yellowish to buff or greyish, and is sometimes without markings.

Habitat

P. napi is found in damp, grassy places with some shade, forest edges, hedgerows, meadows and wooded river valleys. The later generations widen their habitat use in the search for alternative food plants in drier, but flowery places. In the Mediterranean the insect is also found in scrub around mountain streams or springs and on floodplains with Nasturtium officinale. It is found from sea level to high elevations (2500 m in central Europe, 2600 m in Italy, 3600 m in Morocco).

Flight times

The generations vary with location, elevation and season. In northern Europe there are two or three generations from April to early September. In warmer areas and in some good years there is a fourth generation. In southern Europe there are three or more partially overlapping generations from March to October.

Seasonal variation

Plate 13 from The Butterflies of the British Isles by Richard South

In Great Britain, April, May and June specimens have the veins tinged with grey and rather distinct, but are not so strongly marked with black as those belonging to the second flight, which occurs in late July and throughout August. This seasonal variation, as it is called, is also most clearly exhibited on the underside. In the May and June butterfly (plate 13, left side) the veins below are greenish grey, and those of the hindwings are broadly bordered also with this colour. In the bulk of the July and August specimens (plate 13, right side) only the nervures are shaded with greenish grey, and the nervures are only faintly, or not at all, marked with this colour. Now and then a specimen of the first brood may assume the characters properly belonging to the specimens of the second brood; and, on the other hand, a butterfly of the second brood may closely resemble one of the first brood. As a rule, however, the seasonal differences referred to are fairly constant. By rearing this species from the egg it has been ascertained that part (sometimes the smaller) of a brood from eggs laid in June attains the butterfly stage the same year, and the other part remains in the chrysalis until the following spring, the butterflies in each set being of the form proper to the time of emergence.

Other variation

In the typical form -forma typica- the forewings are creamy-white, irrorated with black towards the base. There is an apical blackish blotch, sometimes broken into several terminal spots ; and a black spot between 3 and 4 (in male sometimes absent) In the female there is a black subdorsal posterior spot, and a dorsal confluent mark. The hindwings are creamy-white, the base black-sprinkled and a black costal spot before the apex (in male sometimes absent). The underside of the hindwings and underside apex of the forewings is pale yellow the veins edged with a shading of fine black lines, in the hindwings more broadly.

The ground colour varies from white to cream, sulphur-yellow, chrome yellow and light hues of buff or brown. The spot markings also vary and may be joined or absent. The vein shading varies in colour and in intensity and the shaded bands may be broad or narrow.

Variants, many named, are described by Röber (Europe), Langham (Ireland) and Anon (Britain) [5] [6] [7]

Behaviour

Senses

Recent research has shown that when males mate with a female, they inject methyl salicylate along with their sperm. The smell of this compound repels other males, thus ensuring the first male's paternity of the eggs—a form of chemical mate guarding.[8]

After a female mates, she will display a mate refusal posture that releases methyl salicylate during a subsequent courtship. The release of this anti-aphrodisiac will quickly terminate the courtship. Males are very sensitive to differences in methyl salicylate levels, and will use this sense to influence their mating behaviour. However, a virgin female displaying a very similar posture will release a different chemical that will prolong the courtship ritual. Males are sensitive to these chemical and postural differences, and can discriminate between a receptive virgin female and an unreceptive mated female.[9]

The adult male of this species has a distinctive odour that resembles lemon verbena.[10] This smell is associated with specialized androconial scales on male wings.

Mating system

In the usually polyandrous P. napi, females who mate multiple times have higher lifetime fecundity, lay larger eggs, and live longer compared to females who mate only once.[11] In most organisms it is the female who contributes the most to the reproduction of offspring as she must invest an egg and then carry the zygote. Males, on the other hand, need only provide a sperm that is of low cost. In P. napi, however, mating is unusually costly to males as the ejaculate matter produced contains not only sperm but accessory substances as well. These substances average 15% of male body mass and are incorporated into female soma and reproductive tissues during the mating process.[11] Therefore, the nuptial gift given by P. napi males qualifies both as paternal investment and mating effort. Despite the presence of nuptial gifts and the known benefits to females and offspring, some females are still monogamous. There are multiple reasons in why other species are monogamous like access to males, low sperm population, and age. Some P. napi are likely monogamous due to variation in egg production between polygamous and monogamous females. Polygamous females rely on male mates in order to increase their reproductive output, but polygamous females that only mate twice may not have as high of reproductive output as monogamous females do.[12] This system is unlike other types of butterflies such as Pararge aegeria, where female reproductive effort is independent of male ejaculate.[13]

The amount of ejaculate of virgin males during mating is larger than that of non-virgin males. Females therefore must mate more frequently with non-virgin males in order to obtain the necessary amount of male-derived nutrition.

Sexual cooperation and conflict

In P. napi, the nuptial gift is an example of sexual cooperation towards a common interest of both males and females. The existence of nutrients in the ejaculate is beneficial to the females because it increases female fecundity and longevity, and eventually promotes re-mating. The existence of the anti-aphrodisiac, methyl salicylate, is effective in reducing female harassment by other males.[14]

However, the transfer of this ejaculate can cause a conflict over re-mating due to sperm competition. After a female mates, infertile sperm ejaculated by the male will fill the female's sperm storage organ and prevent her from mating. The amount of infertile sperm stored is correlated with the refractory period of a female after mating. Infertile sperm makes up 90% of the sperm count, showing that males manipulate females by preventing them from mating with another male for a certain period of time. Although polyandry benefits females of P. napi by maximizing the amount of transferred nutrients from the male, the infertile sperm storage prolongs female re-mating.[15]

This refractory period makes it harder for females to mate, and females will continue to have difficulty as their age and mating frequency increase. Males who have recently copulated will not transfer as many nutrients to their next mate, but will spend a longer duration of time for each mating. This increases the mating costs for females because they are spending more time copulating and receiving fewer nutrients from the ejaculate. Males take advantage of this because females do not reduce their mating costs by copulating with virgin males.[16] In addition, males will transfer the most methyl salicylate to their first mate to ensure its paternity. However, a female who mates with a virgin male will have the most difficulty re-mating, therefore delaying her from engaging in the preferred polyandry. Males tailor their ejaculate in the sense that the first ejaculate is meant to prolong the refractory period of the female, and every subsequent ejaculate is meant to maximize efficiency in sperm competition.[9]

Monandry and polyandry

Fecundity benefits of polyandry

Fecundity in P. napi varies with the number of eggs produced as well as the lifespan of the female,[17] and is positively influenced by body mass,[18] other genetic factors independent of body size,[19] and with the degree of polyandry.[20] Fecundity increases with the amount of spermatophore material and ejaculate received from males during mating.[18] In particular, mating with recently unmated males can increase overall female reproductive output, though small females are unable to compensate for the negative effects of size on fecundity by mating multiply.[21][22] However, by mating multiply, polyandrous females have overall higher lifetime fecundity, produce more offspring, and have faster-developing offspring compared to monandrous females.[17][20]

Polyandry versus monandry is a genetically-based mating strategy

Despite the benefits of mating multiply, many female P. napi only mate once, irrespective of the number of high quality, more fit, mates available.[19] Monandry is more common in northern populations of P. napi, and sperm competition is correspondingly lower in the north.[18][20] This polymorphic mating system is partially determined by genetic variability within the females genomes.[19] Monandrous and polyandrous females exhibit different heritable reproductive tactics with monandrous females relying on larval derived resources to realize their fecundity and polyandrous females relying on male donations. When genetically polyandrous females are forced into monandry, due to suboptimal mating conditions, they experience reduced life spans.[18] Monandrous and polyandrous females exhibit different life history strategies: at the start of reproduction females that are monandrous produce more eggs than polyandrous females.[17] It is hypothesized that this life history difference is why monandry is more common in the most northern parts of the species’ range,[17] as early investment in reproduction can be more beneficial with shorter mating seasons.

Maintenance of the monandry/polyandry genetic polymorphism

The maintenance of the two mating systems had been hypothesized to be due to the availability of male nutrients, which can vary within the male-biased operational sex ratio. The male biased sex-ratio can lead to strong competition for mates among the males as well as the males are unlikely to encounter more than one female during the mating season. As a result, females often encounter males that have not recently mated that provide large nuptial gifts. Given the size of the nuptial gift provided by males, means that polyandrous females can substantially increase their lifetime fecundity.[20] However, higher mating rates in females comes with a cost, which can explain the presence of monandrous females in primarily polyandrous populations. Polyandrous females have a higher cost of mating characterized by an increase in time spent looking for mates and time spent mating. This results in a decreased time spent looking for food.[17]

Taxonomy

Some authorities consider P. napi to be a superspecies that includes the American species mustard white and West Virginia white as well as the European dark-veined white.

However, the American butterflies cannot successfully reproduce by laying eggs on the invasive weed garlic mustard, Alliaria petiolata, a fact that threatens their survival as garlic mustard out-competes native mustard plants due to having no biological control species present in North America. In Europe, where garlic mustard is native, 76 things consume it.[23]

Similar species

Subspecies

female P.n. lusitanica
Portugal

For others see Wikispecies.

Synonyms

See also

References

  1. ^ Andersson, J.; Borg-Karlson, A. -K.; Vongvanich, N.; Wiklund, C. (2007). "Male sex pheromone release and female mate choice in a butterfly". Journal of Experimental Biology. 210 (6): 964–70. doi:10.1242/jeb.02726. PMID 17337709.
  2. ^ Maarse, H. (1991). Volatile Compounds in Foods and Beverages. CRC Press. p. 319. ISBN 978-0-8247-8390-7.
  3. ^ Howe, William H. The Butterflies of North America (Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1975)
  4. ^ Driesche, F.V.; Blossey, B.; Hoodle, M.; Lyon, S.; Reardon, R., 2010. Biological Control of Invasive Plants in the Eastern United States. USDA Forest Service. Forest Health Technology Enterprise Team. http://wiki.bugwood.org/Archive:BCIPEUS
  5. ^ Julius Röber, 1909 Pieridae, pp. 39-74, 374, pls. 17-27. In: Seitz, A. (ed.), Die Groß-Schmetterlinge der Erde. 1. Band. Die palaearctischen Tagfalter. – Stuttgart, Fritz Lehmann.[https://www.zobodat.at/pdf/Seitz-Schmetterlinge-Erde_1_1912_Tafeln_en_0001-0190.pdf pdf
  6. ^ Langham, C. 1922 Some forms of Pieris napi taken in County Fermanagh. Irish Naturalist 31: 42-45 pdf
  7. ^ Anon British butterfly aberrations
  8. ^ Andersson, Johan; Anna-Karin Borg-Karlson & Christer Wiklund (2003). "Antiaphrodisiacs in pierid butterflies: a theme with variation!". Journal of Chemical Ecology. 29 (6): 1489–99. doi:10.1023/a:1024277823101. PMID 12918930. S2CID 13702247.
  9. ^ a b Andersson, J.; Borg-Karlson, A.-K.; Wiklund, C. (2003). "Sexual conflict and anti-aphrodisiac titre in a polyandrous butterfly: male ejaculate tailoring and absence of female control". Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences. 271 (1550): 1765–1770. doi:10.1098/rspb.2003.2671. PMC 1691801. PMID 15315890.
  10. ^ Gilbert, Avery N. (2008), What the nose knows: the science of scent in everyday life, Random House of Canada, ISBN 978-1-4000-8234-6
  11. ^ a b Kaitala, Wiklund (1994). "Polyandrous female butterflies forage for matings". Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology. 35 (6): 385–388. doi:10.1007/bf00165840. S2CID 9096451.
  12. ^ Wedell, Nina (2002). "Monandry and polyandry as alternative lifestyles in a butterfly". Behavioral Ecology. 13 (4): 450–455. doi:10.1093/beheco/13.4.450.
  13. ^ Wedell, N.; Karlsson, B. (2003). "Paternal investment directly affects female reproductive effort in an insect". Proceedings of the Royal Society B. 270 (1528): 2065–71. doi:10.1098/rspb.2003.2479. PMC 1691472. PMID 14561296.
  14. ^ Andersson, J.; Borg-Karlson, A.-K.; Wiklund, C. (2000). "Sexual cooperation and conflict in butterflies: A male–transferred anti–aphrodisiac reduces harassment of recently mated females". Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences. 267 (1450): 1271–1275. doi:10.1098/rspb.2000.1138. PMC 1690675. PMID 10972120.
  15. ^ Wedell, Nina; Christer Wiklund; Jonas Bergstrom (2009). "Coevolution of non-fertile sperm and female receptivity in a butterfly". Biol Lett. 5 (5): 678–6781. doi:10.1098/rsbl.2009.0452. PMC 2781977. PMID 19640869.
  16. ^ Kaitala, Arja; Christer Wiklund (1995). "Female mate choice and mating costs in the polyandrous butterfly Pieris napi (Lepidoptera: Pieridae)". Journal of Insect Behavior. 8 (3): 355–363. doi:10.1007/bf01989364. S2CID 20515742.
  17. ^ a b c d e Välimäki, Panu; Kaitala, Aria; Kokko, Hanna (2006). "Temporal patterns in reproduction may explain variation in mating frequencies in the green-veined white butterfly Pieris napi". Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology. 61: 99–107. doi:10.1007/s00265-006-0240-y. S2CID 23160181. Retrieved 13 March 2020.
  18. ^ a b c d Valimaki, Panu; Kaitala, Arja (2006). "Does a lack of mating opportunities explain monadry in the green-veined white butterfly (Pierid napi)?". Oikos. 115: 110–116. doi:10.1111/j.2006.0030-1299.14947.x. Retrieved 13 March 2020.
  19. ^ a b c Wedell, Nina; Wiklund, Christer; Cook, Penny (2002). "Monandry and polyandry as alternative lifestyles in a butterfly". Behavioral Ecology. 13 (4): 450–455. doi:10.1093/beheco/13.4.450. Retrieved 13 March 2020.
  20. ^ a b c d Wiklund, Christer; Kaitala, Arja; Lindfors, Virpi; Abenius, Johan (1993). "Polyandry and its effect on female reproduction in the green-veined white butterfly (Pieris napi L.)". Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology. 33: 25–33. doi:10.1007/BF00164343. S2CID 40165781. Retrieved 13 March 2020.
  21. ^ Bergström, Jonas; Wiklund, Christer (2002). "Effects of size and nuptial gifts on butterfly reproduction: can females compensate for a smaller size through male-derived nutrients?..." Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology. 52 (4): 296–302. doi:10.1007/s00265-002-0512-0. S2CID 13168534. Retrieved 13 March 2020.
  22. ^ Larsdotter Mellström, Helena; Wiklund, Christer (2010). "What affects mating rate? Polyandry is higher in the directly developing generation of the butterfly Pieris napi". Animal Behaviour. 80 (3): 413–418. doi:10.1016/j.anbehav.2010.05.025. S2CID 54389039. Retrieved 13 March 2020.
  23. ^ Becker, R., Gerber E., Hinz H., Katovich E., Panke B., Reardon R., Renz R., Van Riper L., 2013. Biology and Biological Control of Garlic Mustard. The Forest Technology Enterprise Team. https://www.fs.fed.us/foresthealth/technology/pdfs/FS_garlicmustard.pdf
  24. ^ a b c d e f "Pieris napi (Linnaeus 1758)". Fauna Europaea. Archived from the original on June 4, 2011. Retrieved 2007-04-27.
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Green-veined white: Brief Summary

provided by wikipedia EN

The green-veined white (Pieris napi) is a butterfly of the family Pieridae.

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