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bellargus male.
icarus.
Doubt it could be argyrognomon. (granted I don't know Siberian things quite as much.)
Not sure.
Isn't this argus?
This species is identified correctly.
This species is identified correctly.
This species is identified correctly.
athalia.
eumedon.
eumedon.
Probably, didyma.
M. didyma.
L. virgaureae, fm.
O. sylvanus.
O. sylvanus.
O. sylvanus.
phoebe.
phoebe.
B. ino.
L. dispar, female.
This species is identified correctly.
This species is identified correctly.
Neptis hylas, for example (what's a pretty common oriental species that this one looks very similar to). Sure, identification is uncertain. :)
C. alceae no doubt. Male. Sitting as usual (it's kind of a resting pose they can stay in).
That's it.
L. maera.
didyma.
This species is identified correctly.
semiargus.
N. xanthomelas.
This species is identified correctly.
This species is identified correctly.
B. ino.
Female, by the way.
Ambigua in Perm' region??? (Even not looks like...) Imho, this is diamina.
ilia.
Th. sylvestris.
P. icarus.
M. phoebe.
M. phoebe.
N. w-album.
bryoniae at the sea-level (Vladivostok)? Quite doubtful.
Seems to be P. dulcinea, not sure though.
Again, this is either melete or dulcinea (don't know how to distinguish their spring generations). P. napi s. str. shouldn't have been in Prymor'ye.
Again, this is either melete or dulcinea (don't know how to distinguish their spring generations). P. napi s. str. shouldn't have been in Prymor'ye.
Not sure whether it's P. melete or P. dulcinea... fifty/fifty... :)
http://www.boldsystems.org/views/taxbrowser.php?taxon=Pieris melete.
This is surely not io. Most probably N. antiopa.
Imho, this is Pieris of the napi group.
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