Northern brown argus

Aricia artaxerxes

The northern brown argus (Aricia artaxerxes) is a butterfly in the family Lycaenidae. It is found throughout much of the Palearctic ecozone.
Northern Brown Argus Very active colony (50+ seen) on this nature reserve as the sun came out in the afternoon Aricia artaxerxes,Cumbria,Northern brown argus,Smardale

Naming

Subspecies
⤷ ''A. a. allous'' Alps, North Europe
⤷ ''A. a. vandalica'' Kaaber & Høegh-Guldberg, 1961 Jutland, Denmark
⤷ ''A. a. rambringi'' Høegh-Guldberg, 1966 Southern Scandinavia
⤷ ''A. a. opheimi'' Høegh-Guldberg, 1966 Southern Norway
⤷ ''A. a. lyngensis'' Høegh-Guldberg, 1966 Northern Scandinavia
⤷ ''A. a. horkei'' Høegh-Guldberg, 1973 Öland & Gotland, Sweden
⤷ ''A. a. ukrainica'' South-East Europe
⤷ ''A. a. inhonora'' Jachontov, 1909 "Rossia [Russia]centrali et orientali"
⤷ ''A. a. sheljuzhkoi'' Caucasus Major
⤷ ''A. a. turgaica'' South West Siberia
⤷ ''A. a. lepsinskana'' Dzhungarsky Alatau
⤷ ''A. a. transalaica'' Ghissar, Darvaz, Pamirs-Alai, Himalayas
⤷ ''A. a. scytissa'' Nekrutenko, 1985 Tian-Shan
⤷ ''A. a. sarmatis'' S.Urals
⤷ ''A. a. strandi'' Altai – West Amur
⤷ ''A. a. mandzhuriana'' East Amur, Ussuri
⤷ ''A. a. hakutozana'' North Korea
⤷ ''A. a. sachalinensis'' Sakhalin
Northerm Brown Argus Active colony (50+ seen) on this nature reserve as the sun came out in the afternoon Aricia artaxerxes,Cumbria,Northern brown argus,Smardale

Status

This species has confused British entomologists for years. Since its discovery in Britain it has been thought to be a form or a subspecies of the brown argus Aricia agestis and as well as a species in its own right. Since 1967 all brown argus in the north of England and Scotland have been classified as this species. In the last few years genetic studies have shown that some of the colonies along the border of the two species ranges are still being wrongly classified and some colonies in the north of England are now thought to be A. agestis. So far as is known their ranges do not overlap in the UK. The Scottish form is visually quite distinct from the brown argus. It usually has a small white dot in the centre of the upper side fore wing and the black spots on the underside are missing leaving larger white spots on the light brown background. The northern English populations belong to a form called salmacis (called the Durham argus in English) and are very similar to the brown argus including the presence of black spots on the under-wing (see photo) hence all the confusion. In Europe where it is known as the mountain argus, it is widespread in Scandinavia and mountainous regions of central, southern and Eastern Europe. The species is considered locally rare in Britain, and the UK has established a detailed Biodiversity Action Plan to conserve this species along with a small number of other butterfly species.
Northern Brown Argus, Juuka, Finland This Northern Brown Argus (Aricia artaxerxes) has been shot near the place where I photographed the Geranium argus (my previous upload) in Juuka, eastern Finland. Aricia artaxerxes,Blue,Blue butterfly,Finland,Geotagged,Juuka,Lepidoptera,Lycaenidae,Northern Brown Argus,Northern brown argus,Summer,argus,butterfly,insect

Reproduction

''Note that information on this species applies to Great Britain and some details may not be consistent with the species in other parts of its range.''

Eggs are laid singly on the upperside of the food plant leaves. As far is known common rock-rose ''Helianthemum nummularium'' seems to be the sole food plant in Britain. The larvae hibernate while still quite small and continue to feed and grow the following spring. Like the brown argus, it is attractive to ants and often attended by them. Pupation takes place at ground level in late May and butterflies are on the wing from mid June to mid July.

References:

Some text fragments are auto parsed from Wikipedia.

Taxonomy
KingdomAnimalia
DivisionArthropoda
ClassInsecta
OrderLepidoptera
FamilyLycaenidae
GenusAricia
SpeciesA. artaxerxes