Emmelia trabealis (Scopoli, 1763)


Emmelia trabealis: Adult (Northern Greece, Askion, May 2010) [N] Emmelia trabealis: Adult (Mount Olympus, 900m asl, early August 2012) [N] Emmelia trabealis: Adult (e.l. N-Greece, Vitsi, larva in late June 2013) [S] Emmelia trabealis: Larva (N-Greece, Vitsi. late June 2013) [M] Emmelia trabealis: Larva (N-Greece, Vitsi. late June 2013) [S] Emmelia trabealis: Larva (N-Greece, Vitsi. late June 2013) [S] Emmelia trabealis: Larva (Northern Greece, July 2010) [N] Emmelia trabealis: Larva (Northern Greece, July 2010) [N] Emmelia trabealis: Pupa (e.l. Northern Greece, July 2010) [S] Emmelia trabealis: Pupa dorsal [S] Emmelia trabealis: Pupa prior to eclosion (e.l. Vitsi 2013) [S] Emmelia trabealis: Habitat in Northern Greece, May 2010: flower-rich, dry ruderal areas [N] Emmelia trabealis: Larval habitat in Northern Greece, July 2010: dry-warm field margins [N]

Host plants:
The caterpillar lives on winches (particularly Convolvulus arvensis).

Habitat:
Emmelia trabealis inhabits dry warm, often ruderal influenced habitats such as edges in semi-arid grasslands, slopes, field borders, embankments and sand plains.

Life cycle:
Emmelia trabealis flies from late April through September, mostly in two generations, the last of which, although abundant, is often only partially. I found the caterpillar in Northern Greece (Askio mountains) in mid/late July 2010. The pupa overwinters.

Endangerment: endangered

Endangerment factors:
The specioes is endangered in the north due to the massive reduction of unused or little used areas (such as in the Upper Rhine Valley). In southern Europe such tendencies are still less pronounced.

Remarks:
Emmelia trabealis occurs in north Africa, south and Central Europe, as well as in temperate Asia to Korea. In Central Europe (north to Southern Scandinavia) Emmelia trabealis is found only locally and is missing in many regions, e.g. the northern Alps.


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