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Erebia discoidalis Dalman, 1816
Alpines; Red-Disked Alpine
Family: Nymphalidae (Brushfoots)
Species account authors: Crispin Guppy and Jon Shepard.
Extracted from Butterflies of British Columbia.
Introduction to the Butterflies of BC
The Families of Lepidoptera of BC

Photograph

© Norbert Kondla     (Photo ID #6985)

Map

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Distribution of Erebia discoidalis in British Columbia.
(Click on the map to view a larger version.)
Source: Butterflies of British Columbia by Crispin Guppy and Jon Shepard © Royal BC Museum

Species Information


Adult

Red-disked Alpines are easily identified by the lack of eyespots combined with the red central area of the dorsal forewings. The ventral hindwings are mottled grey, especially in the outer area.

Immature Stages

Eggs are barrel-shaped. Mature larvae are cream-coloured and covered with short hairs. A dark diagonal stripe is present on most segments, starting dorsolaterally on the front edge of the segment and running back and down to the back edge of the segment (Bird et al. 1995).

Subspecies

Only the nominate subspecies occurs in North America. Subspecies mcdunnoughi dos Passos, 1940 (TL: Whitehorse, YT) is a synonym of subspecies discoidalis W. Kirby, 1837 (TL: Cumberland House, SK). The amount of red on the forewing (the purported difference) and all other characters have the same range of variation for populations from the Canadian Prairies west to Atlin and the southern YT, and north to the Dempster Highway.

Genus Description


The name Erebia is derived from the Greek Erebus, the region of darkness situated between earth and Hades (Reed 1871), in reference to the dark, dusky colour (Emmet 1991). The common name "alpines" was first used by Holland (1898) in reference to the alpine habitat of many species.

Alpines are medium-sized dark brown to black butterflies that have either submarginal eyespots or a red-flushed area on the forewings. In species with eyespots, there are usually orange-flushed areas around the spots. There are about 80 species worldwide, most of which are slow-flying.

The life histories of only some species are known. In these species, eggs are laid singly on leaves of grasses or sedges. They are white, cream, or yellow brown, and conical in shape with vertical ribs down the sides. First instar larvae are thinly covered with hairs, and are greenish with longitudinal stripes. Mature larvae are slender, and yellow green with light and dark longitudinal stripes down the back and sides. They are thinly covered with hairs, and may have two short tails. Alpines hibernate as partly grown larvae, and there are five or six instars. Pupae are roughly cylindrical, rounded, and suspended from a cremaster. They are pale brown. All alpines have only one generation each year, and some may take two years to mature. Erebia youngi and E. lafontainei are occasionally difficult to separate reliably (worn specimens), in which case they can be distinguished by the shape of the valves of the male genitalia.

Biology


Red-disked Alpines are in flight in May and June, and are among the first butterflies in flight in spring. In the north-central USA, they prefer to fly either quite early or quite late in the day, but fly in the midday period in cool or partly cloudy weather. They fly slowly, weakly, and close to the ground. When attacked, they either rise into the air to be carried away by the wind or work their way down into the vegetation to hide. They appear to have a single-year life cycle (Masters 1971). Mature larvae spin flimsy cocoons before pupating (Kondla et al. 1994). Larval foodplants are probably grasses. At The Pas, MB, the non-native grass Poa lucida is used as the larval foodplant (Krivda 1968).

Habitat


Red-disked Alpines in BC are known only from a few localities in the north. They inhabit wet or dry grassy areas in forest openings, meadows, and alpine tundra in BC and adjacent areas, but in the north-central USA they inhabit bogs and occasionally other areas of damp acid soil (Masters 1971).

Distribution

Distribution

Red-disked Alpines occur in Asia and from central AK across boreal Canada to PQ.

Status Information

Origin StatusProvincial StatusBC List
(Red Blue List)
COSEWIC
NativeS5YellowNot Listed



BC Ministry of Environment: BC Species and Ecosystems Explorer--the authoritative source for conservation information in British Columbia.

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