Aricia agestis
Aricia agestis, the brown argus, is a butterfly in the family Lycaenidae. It is found throughout the Palearctic realm, north to northern Jutland and east to Siberia and the Tian Shan.
Subspecies
- A. a. agestis southern and central Europe
- A. a. calida Chavignerie Sicily, Italy, Asia Minor
- A. a. azerbaidzhana Obraztsov, 1935 Transcaucasia, Caucaus Major
- A. a. nazira Darvaz, western Pamirs, north-western Himalayas
Description in Seitz
L. astrarche Bgstr. . Above similar to the preceding, deep dark brown, with strongly marked discocellular spot, especially in the male. Typical specimens have this spot black and bear red spots at the outer margin. Underside with numerous ocelli, the hindwing with a pale smear from the apex of the cell to the centre of the outer margin. From Scandinavia to the Sahara and northern India, and from the Canary Isles to the island of Askold in the Pacific, ascending in the mountains up to 10,000 ft.. — Besides accidental aberrations in theusual directions of variation, a number of seasonal and geographical forms have been established. If the spring-brood of the Central European form is regarded as name-typical astrarche, ab. aestiva Stgr. is the name for the second brood, which occurs regularly in the south and more rarely in the north and which connects astrarche with calida Bell. A. a. calida . The latter has a much darker, almost coffee-brown, under-side, with a broader band of red spots.
Egg pale green, flattened, with the top concave and the surface minutely reticulate. Larva light green, with a purple [dorsal stripe and a similar stripe along the sides, between them oblique pale smears; in spring and summer on various plants, such as Helianthemum, Centaurea, Erodium, etc. Pupa pale yellowish green, sometimes with a brown dorsal stripe, on or near the ground. The butterflies are on the wing in May and again from July onward, in the south the whole summer until the autumn, in several
broods. They fly everywhere, in fields, on field-paths, on rocky hills, even in gardens, always close to the ground and belong to the very commonest butterflies. During the hours of flight they settle with spread wings on blades of grass, blossoms, or clods of earth, while they sleep with closed wings generally hidden under umbels and the inflorescences of grasses.