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 <title>Art Shapiro&#039;s Butterfly Site - Apodemia</title>
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 <title>Apodemia mormo</title>
 <link>http://10.70.15.71/butterfly/Apodemia/mormo</link>
 <description>&lt;p&gt;A very &lt;a class=&quot;glossary-term&quot; href=&quot;/glossary/3#term137&quot;&gt;&lt;acronym title=&quot;When populations of an organism are found only in small patches, even though those populations may be very abundant or the overall geographic range of the organism is vast.  For example, populations of the Arctic Skipper are found in very small areas but the species has a circumboreal distribution.&quot;&gt;local&lt;/acronym&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, &lt;a class=&quot;glossary-term&quot; href=&quot;/glossary/3#term94&quot;&gt;&lt;acronym title=&quot;A taxon that periodically establishes breeding populations in a region but are not usually permanent breeding residents (although they have the potential to if conditions are suitable).&quot;&gt;colonial&lt;/acronym&gt;&lt;/a&gt; &lt;a class=&quot;glossary-term&quot; href=&quot;/glossary/3#term169&quot;&gt;&lt;acronym title=&quot;The primary unit of classification below genus under the Linnaean system. For our purposes, groups of interbreeding or potentially interbreeding populations of individuals that share an evolutionary history and ancestry.  However, there is significant debate on what exactly constitutes a species and many definitions and concepts have been proposed.  The most common of these is the biological species concept, which requires that sets of populations must be able to successfully and regularly interbreed and produce viable, fertile offspring.&quot;&gt;species&lt;/acronym&gt;&lt;/a&gt; found from sea level to 7000&#039; in a variety of mostly open, rocky habitats. Its flight is very distinctive - it wheels in circles and often does figure-eights, and is very difficult to track with the eye - and it is very &quot;nervous&quot; on flowers, keeping the wings in constant motion. The compound eyes are a remarkable shade of pea green. Females are conspicuously larger than males, with much broader wings; the male &lt;a class=&quot;glossary-term&quot; href=&quot;/glossary/3#term118&quot;&gt;&lt;acronym title=&quot;The front pair of wings on an insect (closer to the head).  The forewings provide structural support and are the primary mechanisms of lift for flight.  Species with pointier forewings are generally faster, more direct fliers, while those with rounded forewings are usually slower and more maneuverable.&quot;&gt;forewing&lt;/acronym&gt;&lt;/a&gt; is sharply angled at the apex. There is much geographic variation which, however, does not impinge on the populations along our &lt;a class=&quot;glossary-term&quot; href=&quot;/glossary/3#term175&quot;&gt;&lt;acronym title=&quot;A line along which environmental data is collected.  In this study, the 10 locations that have been regularly sampled for butterfly diversity is roughly along a transect line paralleling U.S. Interstate 80 from the eastern San Francisco delta through the Sacramento Valley, and up and over the Sierra Nevada mountains.&quot;&gt;transect&lt;/acronym&gt;&lt;/a&gt; (which are all &lt;a class=&quot;glossary-term&quot; href=&quot;/glossary/3#term148&quot;&gt;&lt;acronym title=&quot;A term used to denote that the scientific name of the taxon being discussed is the same at the species and subspecies level. &quot;&gt;nominate&lt;/acronym&gt;&lt;/a&gt; &lt;i&gt;mormo&lt;/i&gt;). There is a Federally protected, &lt;a class=&quot;glossary-term&quot; href=&quot;/glossary/3#term108&quot;&gt;&lt;acronym title=&quot;An organism that is native to a particular region, and usually has a narrow geographic distribution.  &quot;&gt;endemic&lt;/acronym&gt;&lt;/a&gt; &lt;a class=&quot;glossary-term&quot; href=&quot;/glossary/3#term173&quot;&gt;&lt;acronym title=&quot;Taxa below species level that are perceived to have at least some degree of consistent differences in morphology, genotype, and/or life history, and are usually geographically or seasonally differentiated (although they often “blend” together in areas of sympatry).  There are no formal rules or even general guidelines regarding the use and designation of subspecies names, and consequently subspecies names are often controversial and inconsistent.&quot;&gt;subspecies&lt;/acronym&gt;&lt;/a&gt; (Lange&#039;s Metal-Mark, &lt;i&gt;A. m. langei&lt;/i&gt;) at the Antioch Dunes. Farther south different &quot;ecological races&quot; of &lt;i&gt;A. mormo&lt;/i&gt; may occur in the same area but fly at different times of the year. These may in fact be biological species.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;This is our only member of the Riodinids, considered either a &lt;a class=&quot;glossary-term&quot; href=&quot;/glossary/3#term114&quot;&gt;&lt;acronym title=&quot;The nested rank between order and genus in the Linnaean system.  Six butterfly families are present in western North America: Hesperiidae (skippers), Papilionidae (swallowtails and parnassians), Pieridae (whites and sulfurs), Lycaenidae (coppers, hairstreaks, and blues; a.k.a. the gossamer-wings), Riodinidae (metalmarks; placed within Lycaenidae by some authors), and Nymphalidae (brushfoots, including fritillaries, checkerspots, crescents, admirals, satyrs, and monarchs).  &quot;&gt;family&lt;/acronym&gt;&lt;/a&gt; of their own or a subfamily of the Lycaenidae depending on your authority. This is mostly a New World tropical group, with an amazingly diverse array of species, many of which enter into &lt;a class=&quot;glossary-term&quot; href=&quot;/glossary/3#term142&quot;&gt;&lt;acronym title=&quot;The resemblance of two or more unrelated organisms to each other, usually because at least one is toxic, distasteful, or dangerous and the “mimics” are able to gain protection from enemies by resembling them.  In “Batesian mimicry”, there is one nasty model and at least one benign mimic, while in “Müllerian mimicry”, there are multiple nasty models that all look alike.  In our butterfly fauna, the Pipevine Swallowtail acquires dangerous chemicals from its hostplant and is unpalatable and has no mimics in California, but near the center of its historic range around the southeastern U.S. (as inferred from genetic studies), it is mimicked by several unrelated butterfly species.  Also see “Crypsis” above.&quot;&gt;mimicry&lt;/acronym&gt;&lt;/a&gt; associations or are very bizarrely coloredor shaped, looking more like the fanciful butterflies on greeting cards than any other real butterflies do. Many of these tropical species are rare in collections. The group as a whole is strongly ant-associated.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Our scattered populations of the Mormon Metal-Mark are very strongly associated with their hostplants, &lt;a class=&quot;glossary-term&quot; href=&quot;/glossary/3#term152&quot;&gt;&lt;acronym title=&quot;An organism that persists in the same place for more than one year (at least), especially pertaining to plants that do not sprout, grow, mature, reproduce, and die within one year.&quot;&gt;perennial&lt;/acronym&gt;&lt;/a&gt; Wild Buckwheats (&lt;a class=&quot;glossary-term&quot; href=&quot;/glossary/3#term122&quot;&gt;&lt;acronym title=&quot;The nested rank between family and species in the Linnaean system.&quot;&gt;genus&lt;/acronym&gt;&lt;/a&gt; &lt;i&gt;Eriogonum&lt;/i&gt;, family Polygonaceae) - but the partixcular species differ from place to place, and the plants are usually much more widespread than the butterflies are. At Lang Crossing this species uses Sulphur Flower (&lt;i&gt;E. umbellatum&lt;/i&gt;) and (less often) Wright&#039;s Buckwheat (&lt;i&gt;E. wrightii&lt;/i&gt;). At the east end of Donner Pass it uses only &lt;i&gt;E. wrightii&lt;/i&gt; growing on &lt;a class=&quot;glossary-term&quot; href=&quot;/glossary/3#term123&quot;&gt;&lt;acronym title=&quot;A rock roughly equivalent to granite, which is formed deep within the earth at high temperatures and pressures.  It is a common rock type in the higher elevations of the Sierra Nevada and becomes crumbly as it erodes.&quot;&gt;granodiorite&lt;/acronym&gt;&lt;/a&gt;. Low-elevation populations are often on members of the very common &lt;i&gt;E. nudum&lt;/i&gt; group. Some populations of the butterfly have not moved ten feet in over 30 years!&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;One &lt;a class=&quot;glossary-term&quot; href=&quot;/glossary/3#term86&quot;&gt;&lt;acronym title=&quot;The description of how many broods (generations) per year a particular butterfly species produces at any one location.  A butterfly with one generation per year is “univoltine”.  Butterflies with two generations per year are called “bivoltine” and those with more than two are generally referred to as “multivoltine”.&quot;&gt;brood&lt;/acronym&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, midsummer below 5000&#039; but late September-early October at Donner, where it seems to be tempting fate by emerging so late. In the interior North Coast Range, where populations are often on the lowland &quot;race&quot; of &lt;i&gt;E. wrightii&lt;/i&gt;, they may also emerge very late. Adults visit &lt;i&gt;Eriogonum&lt;/i&gt; flowers and rarely much else, but at Donner they have been found at Rabbitbrush, and at Windy Point on Bowman Lake Road on the pink flowers of &lt;i&gt;Eupatorium occidentale&lt;/i&gt;. There are a few records of nectaring on Yerba Santa and pink Dogbane, too.&lt;/p&gt;
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 <category domain="http://10.70.15.71/taxonomy/term/20">Apodemia</category>
 <pubDate>Sun, 28 May 2006 18:09:45 +0000</pubDate>
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