The
speckled wood butterfly is
univoltine in the northern part of its range, e.g. northern Scandinavia. Adults emerge in late spring, mate, and die shortly after laying eggs; their offspring will grow until
pupation, enter
diapause in anticipation of the winter, and emerge as adults the following year – thus resulting in a single generation of butterflies per year. In southern Scandinavia, the same species is
bivoltine The bee species
Macrotera portalis is bivoltine, and is estimated to have about 2 or 3 broods annually. During winter, individuals remain in diapause, in their pharate or prepupal stage. This diapause stage continues until metamorphosis in the next spring or summer, whereupon the bees emerge as adults. Another example of a bivoltine species is
Cyclosa turbinata which is known to reproduce once in the late spring and once again in the fall. The
Dawson's burrowing bee is an example of a
univoltine insect of the order
Hymenoptera. The brood of one winter will remain dormant underground until the following winter, and then will surface from their burrows to mate once, and establish new nests.
Partial voltinism The term
partial voltinism is used to refer to two different (but not necessarily exclusive) situations: • An organism wherein generations overlap in time, and so are not completely reproductively isolated. For example, in bees of the subfamily
Halictinae, one generation is produced in the early summer and one in the late summer, but males produced in the early summer may also
mate in the late summer. • (More commonly) a population where the voltinism is mixed, because of genetic variation (e.g., in the
hybrid zone between a univoltine and a bivoltine area) and/or because environmental stimuli do not induce bivoltinism in all individuals (or across all years). For example, far-northern populations of the
green-veined white butterfly
Pieris napi are mostly univoltine, but some individuals may avert
diapause and produce an additional generation under warm conditions. ==Evolution==