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 <title>Art Shapiro&#039;s Butterfly Site - Brephidium</title>
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 <title>Brephidium exile</title>
 <link>http://10.70.15.71/butterfly/Brephidium/exile</link>
 <description>&lt;p&gt;This &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; demonstrates classic source-sink metapopulation dynamics. West of the Sierra it overwinters successfully only very locally, usually on alkali soils with the favored native &lt;a class=&quot;glossary-term&quot; href=&quot;/glossary/3#term128&quot;&gt;&lt;acronym title=&quot;The species or set of species of plants that caterpillars must eat to develop properly.  Host plant specificity can vary greatly across butterfly species, ranging from only 1 plant species to dozens of suitable plant species.  Host plant specificity can promote speciation between two or more groups of closely related through reproductive isolation.  Prime examples of this are Euphilotes blue butterflies and some Apodemia metalmarks that almost exclusively use different species or varieties buckwheats (Eriogonum) as larval hosts.  A similar situation has been demonstrated in Mitoura hairstreaks that feed on trees in the family Cupressaceae (junipers, incense-cedar, cypresses).&quot;&gt;host plant&lt;/acronym&gt;&lt;/a&gt; &lt;i&gt;Suaeda&lt;/i&gt; (Chenopodiaceae) but not subject to flooding. At these sites it breeds all winter, except in the coldest weather. From them it gradually spreads over the entire Central Valley and Bay Area and even into the foothills as the season progresses, breeding on the summer-annual weed Russian Thistle (&lt;i&gt;Salsola&lt;/i&gt;, several similar species; the common &quot;Tumbleweed&quot; of our area) along roadsides and railroad rights-of-way. Although these populations may become very dense, they go completely &lt;a class=&quot;glossary-term&quot; href=&quot;/glossary/3#term111&quot;&gt;&lt;acronym title=&quot;When an organism that had been formerly been present at a site is presumed to be completely absent.  If the organism is no longer found anywhere, it is “globally extinct”.&quot;&gt;extinct&lt;/acronym&gt;&lt;/a&gt; when the plants die off in late autumn. At Suisun this species breeds on Sea Purslane, &lt;i&gt;Sesuvium&lt;/i&gt; (Aizoaceae), and can become very abundant but is usually drowned out by winter flooding and has to recolonize the following June (or so).&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Larvae are ant-attended and feed largely on flowers and fruit of the host. A generation takes onlyabout 21 days in summer, so population growth can be explosive--but in recent years numbers of this species in our area have been low, which may be related to the fact that the relative abundance of the Salsola species has changed - some seem better hosts than others, though we don&#039;t know why. Other hosts used occasionally in our area include Orach (&lt;i&gt;Atriplex patula&lt;/i&gt;, &lt;i&gt;A.hastata&lt;/i&gt;), Pickleweed (&lt;i&gt;Salicornia&lt;/i&gt;, not a frequent host), and the &lt;a class=&quot;glossary-term&quot; href=&quot;/glossary/3#term130&quot;&gt;&lt;acronym title=&quot;A species or other taxon that is transported or disperses, accidentally or intentionally, to a new locality, where it may be come naturalized or weedy.  For instance, most of the dominant plants in the Central Valley of California are actually endemic to the Mediterranean region of southern Europe and north Africa where seasonal patterns of dry and wet, hot and cold, conditions are extremely similar.  Many of these species arrived in California in the late 19th and early 20th centuries through human related activities.  Interestingly, many butterflies in lowland California are now dependent to some degree on these introduced plants.&quot;&gt;introduced&lt;/acronym&gt;&lt;/a&gt; Australian Saltbush, &lt;i&gt;Atriplex semibaccata&lt;/i&gt;, formerly common but now extinct in most of our area.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Adults can be found dancing like gnats around the host and perching on it. They wander very far, however, and can turn up in places quite remote from any known hosts. They visit flowers with very shallow corollas, mostly near the ground, but in autumn may swarm over Coyotebrush (especially male plants), as well as Asters and Goldenrods. There is almost no variation except in size, and females may be twice the size of males.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;This is an abundant species in alkali lands in the Great Basin, so it should not be surprising that it turns up as a &lt;a class=&quot;glossary-term&quot; href=&quot;/glossary/3#term172&quot;&gt;&lt;acronym title=&quot;An organism that is unexpectedly recorded outside of its normal geographic range.  In most cases, strays are unable to breed in these new locations because of a lack of suitable food and shelter.&quot;&gt;stray&lt;/acronym&gt;&lt;/a&gt; on the East slope and in the high country, usually in autumn visitring Rabbitbrush.&lt;/p&gt;
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 <category domain="http://10.70.15.71/taxonomy/term/22">Brephidium</category>
 <pubDate>Sun, 28 May 2006 18:09:40 +0000</pubDate>
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