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North American Ecology (US and Canada)

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Resident in Northern North America (Scott 1986). Habitats are Canadian to arctic/alpine zone forest clearings, meadows and tundra. Host plants are usually herbaceous or shrubs with most known hosts from three families: Leguminosae, Empetraceae, and Ericaceae, depending on location. Eggs are laid on or near the host plant singly. Individuals overwinter as eggs. There is one flight each year with the approximate flight time Jun30-Aug15; late July-Aug15 in Newfoundland-Labrador (Scott 1986). Considered synonymous with Plebejus idas by some (Scott 1986).
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Conservation Status

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No obvious concerns.
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Cyclicity

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One yearly brood, flying from late June to early September, depending on elevation and habitat.
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Distribution

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Alaska south to California and Colorado, east across the boreal plain to Newfoundland and Labrador (Opler 1999, Layberry et al. 1998).
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General Description

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"This blue has a complete row of orange spots on the hindwing underside, extending onto the forewing (although sometimes faint here). Other species with a full row of hindwing orange spots (Icaricia acmon, I. shasta, Euphilotes ancilla) never have the orange spots extending onto the forewing. This species can be confused with the Melissa Blue (L. melissa) where the ranges overlap in the southern foothills. Idas has narrower orange spots, capped with a black crescent. In Melissa, the orange spots are wider and the black crescents capping the orange spots are flatter, resulting in a more banded appearance. The upperside of idas females can vary from solid brown to mostly purple-blue, and the extent of orange spots varies from none to well-developed. Melissa females always have a solid band of orange, while the strongest-marked Northern females have a row of orange crescents rather than a solid band. It is best to appreciate these differences by looking at more than one individual; uncertain specimens must be dissected for positive identification (see Guppy & Shepard 2001). The specimens illustrated in "Alberta Butterflies" (Bird et al. 1995) as melissa are actually idas. This group of species has a very muddled taxonomic history in North America; there are likely several species involved under what has been referred to as "idas". In Alberta, southern Mountain populations are subspecies atrapraetextus, while subspecies scudderii supposedly inhabits the central/northern mountain and boreal region (Guppy & Shepard 2001). Balint and Johnson (1997) in their revision of polyomatine blues place Lycaeides as a subgenus within the larger genus Plebejus."
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Habitat

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Mountain meadows and open pine woodlands.
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Life Cycle

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The early stages of the Northern Blue in North America are undescribed. In Wisconsin, larvae hatch in May after overwintering as an egg, and pass through 3 or 4 instars, pupating in mid June (Wolf 1993). Adult males often form large congregations at moist spots along mountain trails. In the boreal region, Northern Blues are found in jack pine sandhills, close to patches of blueberries (Vaccinium spp.) on which the larvae feed (Wolf 1993, Nielsen 1999).
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Trophic Strategy

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The larval foodplants are not known in western Canada. In Wisconsin and Michigan, caterpillars are dependent on dwarf bilberry (Vaccinium caespitosum) (Wolf 1993, Nielsen 1999).
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Lycaeides idas ( Dutch; Flemish )

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Insecten

Het vals heideblauwtje (Plebejus idas) is een vlinder uit de familie van de Lycaenidae, de kleine pages, vuurvlinders en blauwtjes.

Kenmerken

De voorvleugellengte is ongeveer 14 millimeter. De soort kan makkelijk verward worden met het heideblauwtje.

Voorkomen

De soort komt verspreid voor over het Palearctisch gebied en het Nearctisch gebied. De vlinder vliegt tot hoogtes van 2100 meter. De vliegtijd is van halverwege juni tot halverwege augustus.

In Nederland staat het vals heideblauwtje op de rode lijst als verdwenen, de soort is verdwenen uit Nederland sinds 1981. Ook uit België is de soort verdwenen, sinds 1984.

Leefwijze

De waardplanten van het vals heideblauwtje zijn struikhei en buiten Nederland en België ook planten uit de familie vlinderbloemigen. De soort overwintert als ei. De rupsen worden vaak meegenomen in nesten van mieren, in Nederland en België vooral de zwarte wegmier, maar overleven ook daarbuiten.

Synoniemen

  • Papilio argus Denis & Schiffermüller, 1775
  • Papilio leodorus Esper, 1782
  • Lycaena argus armoricana Oberthür, 1910
  • Een door Hermann Stauder als Lycaena difficilis benoemde soort is volgens Forster (1936) een vorm van Plebejus idas die voorkomt in de diepere dalen, en verder naar boven geleidelijk in de typische vorm overgaat.[1][2]

Ondersoorten

  • Plebejus idas idas
  • Plebejus idas acreon (Fabricius, 1787)
  • Plebejus idas alaskensis (Chermock, 1945)
  • Plebejus idas altarmenus (Forster, 1936)
  • Plebejus idas argulus (Frey, 1882)
  • Plebejus idas aster (Edwards, 1882)
  • Plebejus idas atrapraetextus Field, 1939
  • Plebejus idas bavarica (Forster, 1936)
  • Plebejus idas empetri Freeman, 1938
  • Plebejus idas longinus (Nabokov, 1949)
  • Plebejus idas lotis Lintner, 1879
  • Plebejus idas nabokovi (Masters, 1972)
  • Plebejus idas sareptensis Chapman, 1917
  • Plebejus idas scudderi (Edwards, 1861)
  • Plebejus idas sublivens (Nabokov, 1949)
  • Plebejus idas tshimganus (Forster, 1936)

Externe links

Bronnen, noten en/of referenties
  • Bos, F. et al. (2006). De Dagvlinders van Nederland (Nederlandse Fauna, deel 7), Utrecht en Leiden, pp. 191-192.
  • Maes, D. & Dijck, H. van (1999). Dagvlinders in Vlaanderen, Antwerpen, p. 247.
  1. Forster, W. (1936). Beitrag zur Systematik des Tribus Lycaenini unter besonderer Berücksichtigung de argyrognomon- und der argus-Gruppe. Mitteilungen der Münchner entomologischen Gesellschaft 26: 92.
  2. Bridges, C.A. (1994). Catalogue of the family-group, genus-group and species group-names of the Riodinidae and Lycaenidae (Lepidoptera) of the world: VIII.139.
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Lycaeides idas: Brief Summary ( Dutch; Flemish )

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Het vals heideblauwtje (Plebejus idas) is een vlinder uit de familie van de Lycaenidae, de kleine pages, vuurvlinders en blauwtjes.

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