Heraclides anchisiades (Rosa-de-Luto)
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Heraclides anchisiades (Rosa-de-Luto)
#2790 - Heraclides anchisiades - Ruby-spotted Swallowtail
@purrdence and a friend.
AKA Papilio anchisiades, and a whole bunch of synonyms in Papilio, and a few in Priamides and Heraclides. I'm not sure where the current concensus lies.
Found from Kansas to Argentina, where the caterpillars feed on plants in the Rutaceae including Citrus, Casimiroa, and Zanthoxylum.
One paper investigated using the caterpillars as hosts for the biocontrol wasp Palmistichus elaeisis (Eulophidae).
Otago Museum Butterfly House, Dunedin, Aotearoa New Zealand.
Alexis Heraclides is Professor of International Relations and Conflict Resolution at the Department of Political Science and History of the Panteion University of Social and Political Sciences. He has served as senior advisor on minorities and human rights at the Greek Ministry of Foreign Affairs (1983-1995) and has written about seventy papers in scholarly journals, as well as six books in English and thirteen in Greek, including, The Self-Determination of Minorities in International Politics (1991), The Cyprus Question: Conflict and Resolution (2002) [in Greek], The Greek-Turkish Conflict in the Aegean: Imagined Enemies (2010), and with Ada Dialla, Humanitarian Intervention in the Long Nineteenth Century: Setting the Precedent (2015).
As a public intellectual Professor Heraclides often contributes to the debate on foreign policy issues in Greece with his -often considered controversial- opinion articles. Ηis most recent intervention was the publication of two books; one that offers an overall assesment of the Greek foreign policy ("National Issues and Ethnocentrism: A Critique of Greek Foreign Policy, 2018, in Greek) and one that provieds a historical and political review of the Macedonian issue (The Macedonian Question 1878-1918: From national claims to conflicting national identities" 2018, in Greek).
Professor Heraclides spoke to Rethinking Greece* about foreign policy formation in Greece on the basis of "national issues"; ethnocentrism as an obstacle to the resolution of these issues; Greece's historical advantage as the fisrt country in the Balkans to become an independent state; the difficult future of Greek-Turkish relations post-2015 Erdoğan; what he foresees in the Cyprus issue; his assessment of the Prespes Agreement as favorable for Greece and finally, the importance of establishing a secure national identity for the country, grounded on Greece's very worthwhile cultural and scientific contributions to the modern world.