T. rubi L. (72 e). Above black-brown with white fringes; male with a scent-patch on the forewing below the costa in the centre. Beneath green, with some white dots on the disc of the hindwing. In ab.
immaculata Fuchs (72 e) these white dots are absent, while they form a complete row in ab.
punctata Tutt. which is even continued on to the forewing. Numerous modifications in the degree of completeness or obsolescence of the row have received names (
caecus,
incompleta,
bipuncata, etc.), such individual aberrations occurring all among specimens of the nymotypical race. —
borealis Krul,[now
C. r. borealis Krulikovsky, 1890] from Kasan, is somewhat smaller, being more yellowish green and without the white dots of the nymotypical form. —
polaris Moschl [
C. r. borealis Krulikovsky, 1890], from the most northern districts of the area of distribution , is a small form, with the underside duller green. —
sibirica Ruhl [
C. r. sibirica (Rühl, 1895)] differs in almost the same way, the underside being less bright green than in
rubi rubi; Northern Asia. —
fervida Stgr.[
C. r. fervida Staudinger, 1901] (72 f) is a southern form, the upperside being paler brown with a golden sheen (unfortunately not distinct in our figure). —
suaveola Stgr.[now species
Callophrys suaveola (Staudinger, 1881)(72 f), from Central Asia, is as large as the largest European specimens, the upperside darker, the underside deeper green. From Saisan and Lepsa; as true
rubi also occurs in these localities,
suaveola may turn out to be the summer-brood. — There occur, moreover, a number of individual varieties; for instance, specimens with the underside brown instead of green, females with a reddish yellow discal spot on the forewing above (Blachier), etc. Egg depressed , green, reticulate. Larva dark green, with a black-edged yellow dorsal line accompanied by pale spots, and with a yellowish side-line. It feeds in June and the autumn particularly on Papilionaceae, such as
Sarothamnus, Genista, Cytisus, but also on many other plants, as oak,
Vaccinium, Sedum, etc. It often bores deep into the flowers of
Genista. Pupa short, much rounded; resembling a small bean, immovable, but nevertheless producing a feeble noise, which Kleemann calls creaking,Schilde twittering or chirping. The butterflies occur from April into July and in warmer districts of the plains again in July and August, the two broods being almost continuous, for instance at Darmstadt. They are very plentiful in most places and always rest with closed wings on shrubs and green twigs of Genista; they are not shy, the spring-specimens being particularly fond of the flowers of
Potentilla. ==Life cycle and behavior==