Abstract
The Natura 2000 network is one of the most important tools for nature conservation in the EU. Therefore, knowledge of the ecology of the species listed on the Habitats Directive annexes is of particular relevance. One of these species is the butterfly Euphydryas aurinia. Much is already known about the ecology of this species at the European level, but information on Romania is scarce. Therefore, in a study area northwest of Cluj, the species was intensively studied in a mark-release-recapture study over its entire flight period. The investigated population harboured many individuals and had a high density. The dispersal behaviour of the individuals was somewhat more pronounced than in Mediterranean and partly also high alpine populations, but roughly comparable to other populations of the nominotypic subspecies. Overall, the ecological differences to Central and Western European populations were not very pronounced, and many of the conservation-relevant statements on this species in Central Europe should also be largely valid in Romania.
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Acknowledgements
We acknowledge the DFG for financing the scholarship of Marius Junker in the graduate college “Verbesserung von Normsetzung und Normanwendung im integrierten Umweltschutz durch rechts- und naturwissenschaftliche Kooperation; no. 1319” at the University of Trier. This article is dedicated to our dear friend Zoltán Varga who dedicated much of his life in the research on butterflies and moths and their conservation. Zoltán, we wish you many more fruitful years of research in good health and joy.
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Junker, M., Rákosy, L. & Schmitt, T. Moderate mobility and high density in a small area: the population ecology of the marsh fritillary Euphydryas aurinia in Transylvania (Romania). BIOLOGIA FUTURA 74, 457–465 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1007/s42977-023-00172-5
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s42977-023-00172-5