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Parnassius phoebus Latreille, 1804
Apollos; Phoebus Appolo
Family: Papilionidae (Swallowtails and Apollos)
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

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Map

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Distribution of Parnassius phoebus in British Columbia.
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Source: Butterflies of British Columbia by Crispin Guppy and Jon Shepard © Royal BC Museum

Species Information


Adult

Males are a clean, opaque white with sharply defined black, grey, and red markings. On the dorsal forewing, both the marginal and the submarginal grey bands are strongly developed and dark grey; the forewing margin usually lacks small triangles of black at each vein. The dorsal and ventral hindwings lack marginal and submarginal grey markings. Both sexes usually have red spots on the hindwings, and frequently also on the forewings, that are much larger on average than those of Rocky Mountain Apollos. The wing fringes are mixed black and white at the ends of the veins; the black is not distinct. The hairs and scales on the head, legs, and ventral abdomen of both sexes are greyish white. The antennae are ringed with black and white bands. The sphragis of the female is small and dark brown.

Immature Stages

Eggs are similar to those of Rocky Mountain Apollos. A circle of 6-8 pie-wedge-shaped divisions surrounds the micropyle of a Rocky Mountain Apollo egg, whereas cuboidal divisions surround Phoebus Apollo micropyles (Shepard and Manley 1998). The mature larva is black with two small orange spots and an orange dot between them on either side of each segment except for segments 1 and 2; there is one spot on either side of segment 1 and two spots on either side of segment 2. Each segment bears three warts, one on the back and one on either side. Some individuals also have two rows of small red spots along the back. Another colour form of the larva resembles that of P. smintheus. A teneral (recently formed and still soft) pupa is of pale sandy colour but later darkens to chocolate (Korshunov and Gorbunov 1995).

Subspecies

The only BC record is a female collected near the Haines Highway at Chilkat Pass by Oscar Dorfmann of Utah. The BC subspecies is apricatus Stichel, 1906 (TL: Kodiak Island, AK), with elias Bryk, 1934 (TL: Mt. St. Elias, AK) and alaskensis Eisner, 1956 (TL: Mt. McKinley National Park, AK) being synonyms (Shepard and Manley 1998).

Genus Description


The name Parnassius is derived from the Parnassus mountain range near Delphi in Greece, in reference to the alpine habitats of most species (Emmet 1991). Linnaeus divided butterflies into several groups, the second of which was the Heliconii, which took their name from the Muses and Graces that lived on Mt. Helicon, the highest peak in the Parnassus range. Apollo was the patron god of the Muses and Graces, and the first species of Linnaeus's Heliconii was Papilio apollo (Emmet 1991), now known as Parnassius apollo. The common name "apollo" was first applied in Britain by British lepidopterists to the one species P. apollo (Bretherton 1990a), and was later extended to apply to the genus as a whole.

Apollos are medium-sized to large white or yellow butterflies with black wing markings. Red eyespots are usually present on the hindwings and, in two species, on the forewings. The outer borders of the wings are semi-transparent due to lack of scales. Two hooks on the forewing base help in the emergence of the adult from the pupal cocoon (Scott 1986b). Females have a brown or white sphragis, a hard structure deposited in the female mating tube by the male during mating to prevent further matings.

The abdomens of the males are very hairy, possibly to reduce heat loss during their long flights searching for females. In contrast, the abdomens of the females are naked or sparsely haired, possibly enabling them to reduce overheating on the hot ground, where they spend most of their time.

Unlike most butterflies, the eyes of males are much larger than those of females. It is unlikely that the only reason for this is that males locate females visually at a distance, because that is true for most butterflies. It may be correlated with the lack of courtship prior to mating: a male simply grapples with a female as soon as he spots her, and attempts copulation. If the female has already mated, the male attempts to grasp the sphragis with his claspers and remove it (CSG).

Eggs are round with a pebbled or pitted surface, and are white to tan in colour. They are laid singly under the edges of objects in the general vicinity of the larval foodplants. Phoebus Apollos may lay eggs directly on the larval food plant (Shepard and Manley 1998). The embryo develops into a larva within the egg chorion within a few weeks of oviposition, but the egg does not hatch until the following spring (Edwards 1868-72).

The larvae have small, vestigial osmeteria (Y-shaped, eversible defensive secretory glands) on the top of the thorax; these are frequently not everted when a larva is "attacked" with forceps, and do not produce any chemical secretion. Pupation occurs in weak cocoons in loose soil or debris on the ground.

Biology


Phoebus Apollos are univoltine, and fly in July and August. The single BC record is from mid-July. Adults are found in mesic tundra areas, frequently in association with solufluction terraces. Solufluction terraces are wavelike ripples of the surface of a slope, with the flatter top of the wave being moister and supporting more rose root than the drier, steeper slopes. They are apparently caused by soil moving downhill on top of permafrost during spring thaw. The larva feeds in warm weather both during the day and at night; in cold weather it is usually rolled up on the foodplant (Korshunov and Gorbunov 1995).

The larval foodplant appears to be roseroot (Sedum integrifolium). Oviposition on rose root has been observed in the northern Yukon by Sigrid Shepard (Shepard and Manley 1998), and it is the larval foodplant in Asia (Tuzov 1997).

Habitat


Phoebus Apollos are known in BC only at Chilkat Pass on the Haines Highway in extreme northwestern BC. They inhabit alpine tundra.

Distribution

Distribution

Phoebus Apollos occur in Siberia, east across AK to western YT and northwestern BC.

Status Information

Origin StatusProvincial StatusBC List
(Red Blue List)
COSEWIC
NativeS1S3RedNot Listed



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