Satyrium acadica

Satyrium acadica, the Acadian hairstreak, is a butterfly of the family Lycaenidae. It is found in North America from British Columbia east to Nova Scotia and south to Idaho, Colorado, the northern Midwest, Maryland, and New Jersey.[2]

Acadian hairstreak
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Family: Lycaenidae
Genus: Satyrium
Species:
S. acadica
Binomial name
Satyrium acadica
Synonyms
  • Strymon acadica
  • Thecla acadica
  • Satyrium acadicum
  • Strymon souhegan Whitney, 1868
  • Strymon muskoka Watson & Comstock, 1920
  • Strymon swetti Watson & Comstock, 1920
  • Strymon coolinensis Watson & Comstock, 1920
  • Strymon montanensis Watson & Comstock, 1920

The wingspan is 29–38 mm. There is one tail on each hindwing. The upperside is brown grey, while the underside of the hindwings is grey. Adults are on wing from June to August in one generation per year. They feed on flower nectar of various flowers.

The larvae feed on the leaves of Salix species, including S. nigra and S. sericea. The species overwinters as an egg.

Subspecies

  • Satyrium acadica acadica
  • Satyrium acadica coolinense (Watson & Comstock, 1920)
  • Satyrium acadica montanense (Watson & Comstock, 1920)
  • Satyrium acadica watrini (Dufrane, 1939)
gollark: But just store all objects in your apiolisp in one very large array (with some mechanism for marking spaces as free) and have the garbage collector traverse it and set entries to free as needed.
gollark: I think arena is the right term.
gollark: <@!293066066605768714> Allocate everything in one apiologically large arenæ?
gollark: acidified.
gollark: https://rust-unofficial.github.io/too-many-lists/

References

  1. Satyrium at Markku Savela's Lepidoptera and Some Other Life Forms
  2. Butterflies and Moths of North America


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