Above dark brown: the apical ocellus minutely centred with white, being in the male bordered with dull dark yellow, and standing in the female in an ochre-yellow half band, which becomes narrower behind and does not reach the hindmargin. The upperside of the live male has often a splendid metallic gloss and bears a broad scent-patch below the cell. Underside of hindwing in the male dark brown, with a hardly perceptible middle band, in the female grey-brown, with a broad, pale, proximally golden-brown-bordered curved band. In several forms throughout Europe Apart from the forms characterized by the disappearance of ocelli or the appearance of accessory there are firstly the albinos which have received in which the blackish ground-colour is replaced by dirty white, while the reddish yellow halfband has remained as such. In others the reddish yellow halfband on the forewing of the female is pale to ivory-white. Specimens have been described in which the band of the male is very prominent on a silky dust-grey upperside. Aberration
cinerea has a bluish gloss on the dark upperside; the hindwing is strongly dentate, tinged with pink on the underside, and bears two eye-dots In hot summers one not seldom meets with specimens in which the reddish yellow colour has increased, this colour being represented by a yellowish red dusting on the apical area in the male and in the female by a yellowish red area in the disc of the hindwing.[Subspecies]
hispulla Hbn. (47b) from Southern Europe, has these characteristics in a still more pronounced degree, and is, besides, generally broader-winged than the nymotypical jurtina —
fortunata Alph. (47 c) is a yet paler form. The live male has in its apical area a magnificent golden gloss on a deep black ground, in the female the ground-colour above is reduced by the extension of the reddish yellow. Moreover, the form is much larger and the basal area of the hindwing is so darkened below that the light discal band contrasts vividly. A variable number of smaller eyespots are usually found on the hindwing undersides. These may number up to twelve per butterfly, with up to six on each wing, but sometimes none. The factors that govern
polymorphism in this trait are not resolved, although a number of theories have been proposed (Stevens 2005). On the other hand, the
evolutionary significance of the upperwing eyespots is more obvious: The more active males have a markedly more
cryptic upperside pattern, whereas the females have more opportunity to present their eyespots in a sudden display of colors and patterns that presumably startle
predators so the butterfly has a better chance of escaping. Some specimens are bi-pupilled. File:Maniola jurtina on flower.jpg|Maniola jurtina female on
buttercup flower. File:Coenonympha pamphilus qtl2.jpg|
Small heath (for comparison) File:Großes Ochsenauge Maniola jurtina 3.JPG|Female File:Meadow brown butterfly (Maniola jurtina) male underside bipupilled.JPG|Female File:Meadow brown butterfly (Maniola jurtina) male underside no spots.jpg|Female File:Große Ochsenauge, Maniola jurtina, mating.JPG|Mating File:Meadow brown butterflies (Maniola jurtina) mating.jpg|Mating File:Maniola jurtina caterpillar.jpg|First
instar caterpillar File:Maniola jurtina pupa.jpg|Pupa ==Similar species==