Published December 25, 2020 | Version v1
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Figure 7 in The first known riodinid 'cuckoo' butterfly reveals deep-time convergence and parallelism in ant social parasites

Description

Figure 7. Map of South America (top left) and detail of topographic map of Río de la Plata basin (red rectangle) showing the geographical distribution of Aricoris arenarum (red circles), type locality in Uruguay (yellow star) and overview of studied vegetation habitats (black circles). A, mountain Chaco in Volcán, Jujuy, Argentina. B, mountain Chaco in Capilla del Monte, Córdoba, Argentina. C, dry Espinal in El Carancho, La Pampa, Argentina. D, Pampean grassland in Castillos, Uruguay. E, coastal sand grasslands in Parque Estadual de Itapuã, Viamão, Rio Grande do Sul (RS), Brazil. F, grassland–Atlantic forest mosaic in Vacaria, RS, Brazil. G, natural grasslands in Mbopicua, Paraguari, Paraguay. Dashed white line delimits the Peripampasic Orogenic Arc (modified from Ferretti et al., 2012), and black dashed line indicates the life cycle study sites (A, B, D, respectively).

Notes

Published as part of Kaminski, Lucas A., Volkmann, Luis, Callaghan, Curtis J., Devries, Philip J. & Vila, Roger, 2020, The first known riodinid 'cuckoo' butterfly reveals deep-time convergence and parallelism in ant social parasites, pp. 860-879 in Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 193 on page 872, DOI: 10.1093/zoolinnean/zlaa150, http://zenodo.org/record/5636586

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