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North American Ecology (US and Canada)

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Erebia dabanensis is resident to much of Alaska (Scott 1986). Habitats are arctic/alpine zone dry tundra (esp. short grass and sedge tundra), and occasionally rocky scree in some places. There is one flight each year with the approximate flight time late June-July 31; this species is possibly biennial (Scott 1986).
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Behavior

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Adults sip mud (Scott, 1986).
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Erebia dabanensis

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Erebia dabanensis is a small butterfly found in the East Palearctic that belongs to the browns family.

Subspecies

  • E. d. dabanensis East Sayan, SouthTransbaikalia
  • E. d. olshvangi Gorbunov, 1995 Polar Urals
  • E. d. troubridgei Dubatolov, 1992 Yakutia, Chukot Peninsula
  • E. d. chingiza Churkin, 1999 NorthTransbaikalia
  • E. d. sokhondoensis Belik, 2001

Description from Seitz

debanensis Ersch. (37 f). Upperside dark black-brown, on the forewing a straight submarginal row of 4 round small black spots bearing black dots; before the margin of the hindwing there are as a rule 3, but rarely 4, such red-lnown spots, which are only very minutely or not at all dotted with black. The underside of the forewing grey-brown, with an obsolescent russet brown distal band, the ocelli of which have a somewhat lighter border. The apex and distal margin thinly dusted with white-grey. The underside of the hindwing is somewhat more densely scaled white-grey and has a but little darker dentate median band which is sharply defined in- and outwardly and bordered by a narrow whitish dentate line here and there on both sides. The ocelli which are situated in the somewhat lighter distal area are smaller than above, being sometimes altogether absent or replaced by small, hardly visible, black dots. Before the outer margin there is a submarginal band composed of small obsolescent brown spots. The female is lighter, more grey-brown, the ocelli of the hindwing are distinctly larger and on the underside of the hindwing of the same size as above. From East Siberia. — tundra Stgr. [now full species Erebia tundra Staudinger, 1888] is smaller, the distal band of the upperside somewhat obsolescent, beneath broader and proxinially and distally sharply defined. The underside of the hindwing scaled white-grey, with dark brown, distally dentate, median band and liefore the distal margin a slightly dentate dark transverse line. Likewise from East Siberia. — fletcheri Elw. [now full species Erebia fletcheri ] of which we know only the figure of the single sure female captured by Fletcher at 7500 ft. in the Altai Mts., is we think nothing but a specimen of debanensis in which the reddish yellow borders of the ocelli of the forewing are merged on both sides to form a broad russet band. On the hindwing the small ocelli are widely separated from one another. The median band on the underside of the hindwing is dark and somewhat prominent in debanensis , while in fletcheri it is of the same dark brown colour as the rest of the wing, so that only the edges of this band are visible as two finely dentate black curved lines. Found in July between Kurai and Bashkaus.[2]

Biology

The larva feeds on Festuca.

See also

References

  1. ^ Erschoff, 1872 Diagnoses de quelques espèces nouvelles de Lépidoptères appartenat à la faune de la Russiae Asiatique Horae Soc. Ent. Ross. 8 (4) : 315-318, pl. 8
  2. ^ Eiffinger, G. 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.
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Erebia dabanensis: Brief Summary

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Erebia dabanensis is a small butterfly found in the East Palearctic that belongs to the browns family.

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