Timing of Karner blue (Lepidoptera : Lycaenidae) larvae in spring and adults in spring and summer in Wisconsin during 1991-1998

Citation
Ab. Swengel et Sr. Swengel, Timing of Karner blue (Lepidoptera : Lycaenidae) larvae in spring and adults in spring and summer in Wisconsin during 1991-1998, GT LAKE ENT, 32(1-2), 1999, pp. 79-95
Citations number
27
Categorie Soggetti
Entomology/Pest Control
Journal title
GREAT LAKES ENTOMOLOGIST
ISSN journal
00900222 → ACNP
Volume
32
Issue
1-2
Year of publication
1999
Pages
79 - 95
Database
ISI
SICI code
0090-0222(199921)32:1-2<79:TOKB(:>2.0.ZU;2-T
Abstract
During 1991-1998, formal surveys and incidental observations of the Karner blue (Lycaeides melissa samuelis) (Lepidoptera: Lycaenidae) occurred on 2-8 dates each year for spring larvae and on 5-10 dates in each adult generati on at 148 pine-oak barrens in ten counties of central and northwestern Wisc onsin. A total of 493 spring larvae were recorded, as well as 16,039 adults (6755 in spring and 9284 in summer) in 375.5 hours of formal adult survey effort. Adult Karner blue timing varied among years by about 2-5 weeks in s pring and 2.5-6 weeks in summer. The mean span between spring and summer ad ult generations was about 46 to 50 days for all sites pooled. In some years , Karner blue phenology appeared to "speed up" or "slow down relative to th is average span between generations. At six sites surveyed for spring and s ummer adults in the same 5 years, the mean date of maximum adults differed among sites by about 9.5 days in spring and 6 days in summer: These sites v aried in the consistency of their relative phenology (early, average, or la te) between spring and summer. Consistent sites changed relatively little i n shading from spring to summer because canopy was sparse or primarily ever green. Variable sites changed in degree of insolation between spring and su mmer, because of the leafing out of deciduous canopy or the higher angle of the summer sun rising above the surrounding forest more. Four kinds of var iability should be considered in assessments of Karner blue phenology: (1) intergenerational fluctuations in abundance, (2) phenological differences a mong years and (3) among sites, and (4) interannual variation in span betwe en spring and summer generations.