Boloria

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Boloria
Boloria.dia.7558.jpg
Weaver's fritillary, Boloria dia
Scientific classification e
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Family: Nymphalidae
Tribe: Argynnini
Genus: Boloria
Moore, 1900
Species

Several, see text

Synonyms
  • Baloria "Moore, 1900"[verification needed] (lapsus)
  • Clossiana Reuss, 1920 (but see text)
  • Proclossiana Reuss, 1926
  • Smoljana Slivov, 1995

Boloria is a brush-footed butterfly (Nymphalidae) genus. Clossiana is usually included with it nowadays, though some authors still consider it distinct and it seems to warrant recognition as a subgenus at least.

Species[]

Listed alphabetically:[1][2][3]

  • Boloria acrocnema Gall & Sperling, 1980 – Uncompahgre fritillary
  • Boloria alaskensis (Holland, 1900) – mountain fritillary (Arctic America, Alaska to Hudson Bay, Wyoming, Polar Urals, Yamal Peninsula, Transbaikalia, Chukotka, Wrangel Island)
  • Boloria aquilonaris (Stichel, 1908) – cranberry fritillary
  • Boloria alberta (W.H. Edwards, 1890) – Alberta fritillary
  • Boloria angarensis (Erschoff, 1870) (Transbaikalia, South Siberia, Far East Yakutia, Polar Urals, Yamal Peninsula, Sayan, Tuva mountains, Amur, Ussuri, North Korea, Northeast China)
  • Boloria astarte (Doubleday, [1847]) – Astarte fritillary
  • Boloria bellona (Fabricius, 1775) – meadow fritillary
  • Boloria caucasica (Lederer, 1852) (Caucasus, Transcaucasia, Turkey)
  • Boloria chariclea (Schneider, 1794) – Arctic fritillary or purplish fritillary
  • Boloria dia (Linnaeus, 1767) – Weaver's fritillary or violet fritillary
  • (Gibson, 1920) (Yukon to British Columbia, Polar Urals, Transbaikalia, Yakutia, Chukotka)
  • (Staudinger, 1892) (Transbaikalia)
  • Boloria epithore (Edwards, [1864]) – Pacific fritillary
  • (Christoph, 1893) (Yakutia, Sayan, Transbaikalia, Magadan)
  • (Staudinger, 1901) (Tian-Shan, Ghissar-Darvaz, Pamirs-Alai)
  • Boloria eunomia (Esper, [1800]) – bog fritillary, ocellate bog fritillary
  • Boloria euphrosyne (Linnaeus, 1758) – pearl-bordered fritillary
  • Boloria freija (Thunberg, 1791) – Freya's fritillary, Freija fritillary or zigzag fritillary
  • Boloria frigga (Thunberg, 1791) – Frigga fritillary, willow bog fritillary
  • Warren, 1944 (Altai, Sayan, Tuva mountains, Mongolia)
  • Boloria improba (Butler, 1877) – dingy fritillary
  • Boloria iphigenia (Graeser, 1888) (Japan, east Amur, Ussuri and northeast China)
  • (Oberthür, 1884) (Tibet, West China, North China)
  • Boloria graeca (Staudinger, 1870) – Balkan fritillary
  • Boloria jerdoni (Lang, 1868) – Jerdon's silverspot
  • Boloria kriemhild (Butler, 1877) – relict fritillary (Montana, Wyoming)
  • Gorbunov & Korshunov, 1995 (Altai)
  • Boloria napaea (Hoffmannsegg, 1804) – napaea fritillary or mountain fritillary
  • Boloria natazhati (Gibson, 1920) – cryptic fritillary or Beringian fritillary
  • (Nakahara, 1926) (Sakhalin)
  • Boloria oscarus (Eversmann, 1844) (Siberia, Amur, Ussuri, Sakhalin, Yakutia)
  • Boloria pales (Denis & Schiffermüller, 1775) – Shepherd's fritillary
  • (Butler, 1882) (southern Ussuri, North Korea, Amur)
  • Boloria polaris (Boisduval, [1828]) – Polaris fritillary
  • Churkin, 1999 (Barguzin Mountains in Buryatia)
  • Boloria selene (Denis & Schiffermüller, 1775) – small pearl-bordered fritillary or silver-bordered fritillary
  • Boloria selenis (Eversmann, 1837)
  • (Moore, [1875]) (Pamirs to Alai, Tian-Shan, West Himalaya)
  • Boloria thore (Hübner, [1803]) – Thor's fritillary
  • Boloria titania (Esper, 1793) – Titania's fritillary or purple bog fritillary
  • Boloria tritonia (Böber, 1812) (Baikal, Amur, Ussuri)

Brachiopod[]

Grunt described a brachiopod genus in 1973 under the same name. Since each code of biological nomenclature allows only for one genus with the same name, the brachiopod genus is in need of renaming.

References[]

  1. ^ "Boloria Moore, 1900" at Markku Savela's Lepidoptera and Some Other Life Forms
  2. ^ Fritillaries, Butterflies of Canada
  3. ^ Jim P. Brock, Kenn Kaufman (2003) Kaufman Field Guide to Butterflies of North America. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.

Further reading[]

  • Glassberg, Jeffrey (2001). Butterflies through Binoculars: The West.
  • Guppy, Crispin S. and Shepard, Jon H. (2001). Butterflies of British Columbia.
  • James, David G. and Nunnallee, David (2011). Life Histories of Cascadia Butterflies.
  • Pelham, Jonathan (2008). Catalogue of the Butterflies of the United States and Canada.
  • Pyle, Robert Michael (2002). The Butterflies of Cascadia.

External links[]

Retrieved from ""