Zygaena ephialtes

Zygaena ephialtes
Ephialtoid form
Peucedanoid form
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Family: Zygaenidae
Genus: Zygaena
Species: Z. ephialtes
Binomial name
Zygaena ephialtes
(Linnaeus, 1767)
Synonyms
  • Sphinx ephialtes Linnaeus, 1767
  • Sphinx athamanthae Esper, 1789
  • Sphinx coronillae Denis & Schiffermuller, 1775
  • Sphynx medusa Pallas, 1771
  • Sphinx peucedani Esper, 1780

Zygaena ephialtes is a species of moth in the family Zygaenidae. There is no common English name, but it is a type of burnet moth.

Subspecies

Subspecies within this species: [1]

  • Zygaena ephialtes ephialtes
  • Zygaena ephialtes albaflavens Verity, 1920
  • Zygaena ephialtes albarubens Verity, 1946
  • Zygaena ephialtes athamanthae (Esper, 1789)
  • Zygaena ephialtes bohemia Reiss, 1922
  • Zygaena ephialtes chalkidikae Holik, 1937
  • Zygaena ephialtes corcyrica Rauch, 1981
  • Zygaena ephialtes coronillae (Denis & Schiffermuller, 1775)
  • Zygaena ephialtes danastriensis Holik, 1939
  • Zygaena ephialtes istoki Silbernagel, 1944
  • Zygaena ephialtes ligus Verity, 1946
  • Zygaena ephialtes lurica Dujardin, 1965
  • Zygaena ephialtes medusa (Pallas, 1771)
  • Zygaena ephialtes meridiei Burgeff, 1926
  • Zygaena ephialtes pannonica Holik, 1937
  • Zygaena ephialtes peucedani (Esper, 1780)
  • Zygaena ephialtes podolica Holik, 1932
  • Zygaena ephialtes retyesati Holik, 1948
  • Zygaena ephialtes roussilloni Koch, 1940
  • Zygaena ephialtes smolikana Naumann & Rose, 1981
  • Zygaena ephialtes tambovensis Holik & Sheljuzhko, 1953
  • Zygaena ephialtes taurida Holik & Sheljuzhko, 1953
  • Zygaena ephialtes transpadana Verity, 1946
  • Zygaena ephialtes tymphrestica Holik, 1948

Distribution

This species can be found in most of Europe, except Ireland, Great Britain, the Netherlands, Portugal, Fennoscandia, Denmark, Estonia and Latvia.[2][1] In Italy is generally called prete (priest).

Habitat

The moths are found preferentially where the food plants of the caterpillars occur in larger stocks, such as railway embankments and roadsides, and in any case only on limestone soils, grasslands and sparse forests. Warm, dry areas and sunny slopes are also preferred.

Description

Zygaena ephialtes has a wingspan reaching 35–40 millimetres (1.4–1.6 in). The forewings are dark blue, with five or six spots very variable in the color, as they may be red, yellow or white. Usually these spots are red, while the ring segment (belt) on the abdomen may be yellow or red. The hindwings are red, yellow or completely black and have a delicate, black outer edge.

The caterpillars are about 22 millimeters long. They have a greenish-yellow basic color and carry longitudinal lines of black dots and square patches. Eggs are pale green, while pupa are yellow brown.

Zygaena ephialtes is unpalatable to birds. Amata phegea imitates its appearance (Müllerian mimicry). [3] Both moths are examples of aposematism.

Polymorphism

This moth is a polymorphic species having different mimetic forms.[4] There is an ephialtoid form similar in coloration to the genus Amata of tiger moths (Arctiidae) (see Amata phegea). They are characterized by white spots on the upper wing surface and the wear a yellow ring segment. In contrast, the peucedanoid form is similar to the six-spot burnet (Zygaena filipendulae). They have five or six red spots on the upper wing surface and have a red body ring.

Cocoon

These features are genetically fixed. The populations and subspecies occur on these allelic combinations in different proportions. The dominant alleles are peucedanoid and dominate in the ephialtoid form.

Biology

The moths fly in one generation from early July to August. The caterpillars can be found in September and after hibernation until June of next year. The females lay their eggs on the food plants of the caterpillars. In most cases, the caterpillar overwinters several times until it finally pupates in a long, silver-white web on stems or shrubs.

The larvae feed mainly on the vetches Coronilla varia and Coronilla emerus, but also on the wild thyme (Thymus serpyllum), horseshoe vetch (Hippocrepis comosa) and other types of clover (Trifolium), speedwell (Veronica (plant)) and plantain (Plantago).

References

  1. 1 2 Funet.fi
  2. Fauna Europaea
  3. Richard Dawkins The Extended Phenotype: The Long Reach of the Gene
  4. Vincent H. Resh, Ring T. Cardé, ed. (2009). Encyclopedia of insects (2nd ed.). Amsterdam: Elsevier/Academic Press. p. 637. ISBN 0123741440.
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