Search results for "Heath fritillary"

showing 4 items of 4 documents

Host plant use by the Heath fritillary butterfly, Melitaea athalia : plant habitat, species and chemistry

2008

We present a study of habitat use, oviposition plant choice, and food plant suitability for the checkerspot butterfly Melitaea athalia Rottemburg (Lepidoptera: Nymphalidae) in Aland, Finland. We found that in Aland, unlike in the mainland of Finland and many parts of its range, M. athalia flies mainly in open meadows. When offered an array of plants in a large (32 × 26 m) field cage, they predominately oviposited upon Veronica chamaedrys L., V. spicata L. and Plantago lanceolata L. (Plantaginaceae), which grow in open meadows. The relative abundance of the butterfly in Aland, and its habitat and host plant use there, may reflect local adaptation to land use practices and geology that mainta…

0106 biological sciencesHerbivoreEcologybiologyRange (biology)EcologyHost (biology)Veronica chamaedrys15. Life on landbiology.organism_classification010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesNymphalidae010602 entomologyHeath fritillaryHabitatInsect ScienceButterflyAgronomy and Crop ScienceEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsArthropod Plant Interactions
researchProduct

Effects of a mobile disturbance pattern on dynamic patch networks and metapopulation persistence

2021

Abstract Motivation Certain early-succession habitats may emerge only at restricted locations following disturbance. Therefore, whether disturbances tend to occur at certain sites or not can significantly affect habitat availability and metapopulation persistence of early-successional habitat specialists. Available models that combine metapopulation and landscape processes do not address how to model mobile, spatially shifting disturbance intensities independent of factors of site suitability. We present a model that allows the study on how a mobile disturbance pattern, of either natural or anthropogenic origin, affects patch network and metapopulation dynamics in realistic, heterogeneous l…

0106 biological sciencesThe false heath fritillaryDisturbance (geology)Metapopulation dynamicsClimate changeHabitat suitability modelsMetapopulationhabitaatti010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesMetapopulation modelsmetapopulaatiotMelitaea diaminaMelitaea diaminabiologyEcology010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyEcological Modelingtummaverkkoperhonen15. Life on landbiology.organism_classificationpopulaatiodynamiikkaHabitat dynamicsHeath fritillaryGeographyHabitatWildlife Ecology and ConservationButterflyPersistence (discontinuity)
researchProduct

The dual role of rivers in facilitating or hindering movements of the false heath fritillary butterfly

2015

Background Species movement responses to landscape structures have been studied using a variety of methods, but movement research is still in need of simple methods that help predicting and comparing movements across structurally different landscapes. We demonstrate how habitat-specific movement models can be used to disentangle causes of differentiated movement patterns in structurally different landscapes and to predict movement patterns in altered and artificial landscapes. In our case study, we studied the role of riparian landscapes to the persistence of the endangered false heath fritillary butterfly (Melitaea diamina) in its newly discovered coastal distribution region in Finland. We…

0106 biological sciencesPopulationEndangered speciesriparian corridorshabitat-specific models010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesHabitat-specific movement modelseducationMelitaea diaminaEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsRiparian zoneeducation.field_of_studygeography.geographical_feature_categoryMelitaea diaminabiologyMovement (music)EcologyResearchRiparian corridorstummaverkkoperhonen15. Life on landFalse heath fritillarybiology.organism_classification010601 ecologyGeographyHeath fritillaryAnimal ecology1181 Ecology evolutionary biologyButterflyHabitat-specific modelsMovement Ecology
researchProduct

Data from: The dual role of rivers in facilitating or hindering movements of the false heath fritillary butterfly

2016

Background: Species movement responses to landscape structures have been studied using a variety of methods, but movement research is still in need of simple methods that help predicting and comparing movements across structurally different landscapes. We demonstrate how habitat-specific movement models can be used to disentangle causes of differentiated movement patterns in structurally different landscapes and to predict movement patterns in altered and artificial landscapes. In our case study, we studied the role of riparian landscapes to the persistence of the endangered false heath fritillary butterfly (Melitaea diamina) in its newly discovered coastal distribution region in Finland. W…

medicine and health careHoloceneRiparian corridorsHabitat-specific modelsLife SciencesMedicine15. Life on landFalse heath fritillaryCapture-recapture dataMelitaea diaminaMark-recapture data
researchProduct