- Sandia Hairstreak
Taxobox
name =
image_width = 222px
image_caption =
regnum =Animal ia
phylum =Arthropod a
classis =Insect a
ordo =Lepidoptera
familia =Lycaenidae
genus = "Callophrys "
species = "C. mcfarlandi"
binomial = "Callophrys mcfarlandi"
binomial_authority = Clench & Ehrlich, 1960 [http://www.funet.fi/pub/sci/bio/life/insecta/lepidoptera/ditrysia/papilionoidea/lycaenidae/theclinae/callophrys/index.html] ] The Sandia Hairstreak,scientific name "Callophrys mcfarlandi" (or "Sandia mcfarlandi" [ [http://www.natureserve.org/explorer/speciesIndex/Genus_Callophrys_103671_1.htm] Nature Serve Explorer] ) is aspecies ofbutterfly native toNorth America . [http://www.butterfliesandmoths.org/species?l=1527] Butterflies and Skippers of North America (maintained byMontana State University )] [http://www.nearctica.com/butter/plate8/Cmcfar.htm] The Natural History of North America] A relatively rare butterfly with a limited range, [http://www.newmexicophotos.com/galleries/sandia-hairstreak.htm] New Mexican Butterflies: Sandia Hairstreak a cholla blossom.] it was discovered in La Cueva Canyon,Albuquerque in 1959 by "a 4-H kid" [http://www.orionmagazine.org/index.php/butterfly/3009/] "Orion Magazine", The Butterfly Big Year] and described the following year. [http://legis.state.nm.us/Sessions/02%20Regular/memorials/house/HJM001.html] Joint House Memorial of the 45th legislature of the State of New Mexico, second session 2002] [ [http://www.funet.fi/pub/sci/bio/life/insecta/lepidoptera/ditrysia/papilionoidea/lycaenidae/theclinae/callophrys/index.html] Clench & Ehrlich, 1960] [http://research.yale.edu/peabody/jls/htms/1990s/1991-45(3)188-Pratt.htm] "Journal of the Lepidopterists' Society" 45(3), 1991, 188–196 (maintained byYale University )] The Sandia Hairstreak was made one of thestate insect s ofNew Mexico in a 2002 bill approved the following year. [http://legis.state.nm.us/Sessions/03%20Regular/bills/house/HB0013.pdf House Bill 13, 46th Legislature of the State of New Mexico] ]Description
"C. mcfarlandi" is a relatively small butterfly with tailess wings that span 2.9 – 3.2 cm (1 1/8 to 1 1/4 inches). The wings of females are generally reddish brown on the dorsal side with a narrow border of black around the edge. Males are typically brown. The underside of the wings of both genders is usually greenish-yellow on the undersides with a postmedian line bordered with black near the base. This species exhibits a certain amount of polymorphism, making the
phenotype of some individuals significantly different than that described here ( [http://www.mariposasmexicanas.com/callophrys_mcfarlandi.htm see photos] ) but according to one simple description "it is small and gold and green in color and it lives in and among beargrass plants, where its pink, lavender and white caterpillars eat beargrass flowers, making the butterfly and its caterpillar easy to identify."A butterfly hunter writing for "Orion" magazine describes:
...hairstreaks — "hair" for the tiny tails many kinds trail from their hindwings, "streak" for their stripes, or perhaps derived from their zippy flight. Many hairstreaks make their appearance early, then are seen no more...Goldy-green with a white stripe below, it blends perfectly with its larval host...I found the plant, and the butterfly, in its type locality (= place of original collection and description) — the
Sandia Mountains , outside Albuquerque. What very different worlds: the beargrass mounts, the huge nearbycasino , the city beyond. Hairstreaks, with their specific botanical needs and moist-spring ways, may be some of the first butterflies to feel the warming and drying, and to abandon historical ranges. But the Sandia is still there for now.Life cycle
This butterfly lays its
egg s on thestalk s of Texas sacahuista ("Nolina texana"). Its caterpillars are naturally monophagous (feeding only) on this plant and eat both itsflower s and itsfruit . An entomologist at theUniversity of California, Riverside discovered they could be raised in thelaboratory on "Lotus scoparius " with little or no retardation in development (whereas a few other picky "lycaenids" did not fare as well) suggesting that its ancestral range was once must larger. Adults feed on the nectar of the same host plants used by theirlarva e.Distribution and habitat
The Sandia Hairstreak has a range limited to yucca-
agave desert in theSoutheastern United States (specifically SoutheastColorado south through New Mexico and WesternTexas ) and NortheastMexico .tate butterfly
Sandia Hairstreak was made the official state butterfly of New Mexico by the
New Mexico Legislature in 2004. In their declaration they opined that this species (despite its range beyond the state) was "thought of as uniquely New Mexican." Among the many other reasons they cited for naming the Sandia Hairstreak as an official symbol include:...an official butterfly symbol would add color, beauty and diversity to the state's array of existing symbols... at least seventeen other states have official butterfly symbols...butterflies enhance the beauty of the environment, and naming a butterfly symbol would benefit tourism and the economy of New Mexico by bringing attention to a New Mexico butterfly, by adding credibility to New Mexico among entomologists, which may encourage scientific research in the state, and by providing educational opportunities for study and appreciation of the butterfly and its habitat...naming a New Mexico butterfly would enhance awareness of the importance of butterflies, in
The legislative session also commended a group of dancers that had performed an original dance presentation entitled "The New Mexico Gossamer Wing" for their benefit.ecosystem s as importantpollinators forwildflowers andagricultural crops and promote the conservation of our natural wildlife heritage...children love butterflies, and naming a New Mexico butterfly would bring joy to New Mexico's children...the Sandia hairstreak symbolizes the ability of New Mexican residents to thrive year-round in asemiarid climate where different years bring floods and droughts and where the terrain is beautiful but rugged...the Sandia hairstreak can be easily found by children among the native beargrass in New Mexico's wide-open spaces as well as in towns and cities where the beargrass plant grows...the Sandia hairstreak, a New Mexico native, does not migrate, but stays in the New Mexicolandscape year-round and has not been designated as the state butterfly for any other state.References
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