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yvonne401 on Apr 16, 2017:

BL ~ Butterflies From Our State or Country #2

I hope you like the pics that I have chosen for you!

Here are some Butterflies of Pennsylvania:

Aphrodite Fritillary

Family: Nymphalidae

Subfamily: Heliconiinae

Identification: Geographically variable. Upperside reddish orange-brown; male forewing with black spot below cell and with no black scales on veins. Underside of hindwing has pale submarginal band narrow or missing.

Wing Span: 2 1/2 - 3 1/4 inches (6.3 - 8.3 cm).

Life History: Males patrol for females during warm hours. Females walk about on the ground to lay single eggs near violets. First-stage caterpillars do not feed, but overwinter until spring, when they eat young leaves of violets.

Flight: One brood from mid-June to mid-September.

Caterpillar Hosts: Various violet species including northern downy violet (Viola fimbriatula) and lance-leaved violet (V. lanceolata).

Adult Food: Nectar from flowers of milkweed and viper's bugloss, among others.

Habitat: Moist prairies, high mountain meadows, openings in barrens, brushland, dry fields, open oak woods, bogs.

Range: Canada south of the taiga from Nova Scotia west through the northern Midwest and Great Plains to the Rocky Mountains, then south in the mountains to east-central Arizona and northern New Mexico; south in the Appalachians to northern Georgia.

Conservation: Not usually required.

NCGR: G5 - Demonstrably secure globally, though it may be quite rare in parts of its range, especially at the periphery.

Management Needs: None reported.

Family: Papilionidae

Subfamily: Papilioninae

Identification: Male is yellow with dark tiger stripes. Female has 2 forms: one yellow like the male and the other black with shadows of dark stripes. Hindwing of both female forms has a row of striking blue chevrons and an iridescent blue wash over parts of the interior hindwing. The upperside hindwing has a prominent orange marginal spot that is generally larger than the row of pale marginal spots. On the underside of forewing of spring individuals the row of marginal spots may be merged into a continuous band, thus appearing similar to the Canadian Tiger Swallowtail.

Wing Span: 2 1/2 - 4 1/2 inches (6.2 - 11.4 cm).

Life History: Two broods in the north, three in the south. Males patrol for receptive females. Females lay eggs singly on host leaves. Caterpillars eat leaves and rest on silken mats on the upper surface of leaves. Chrysalids overwinter.

Flight: 3 flights from February-November in Deep South; 2 flights from May-September in north.

Caterpillar Hosts: Leaves of various plants including wild cherry (Prunus), sweetbay (Magnolia), basswood (Tilia), tulip tree (Liriodendron), birch (Betula), ash (Fraxinus), cottonwood (Populus), mountain ash (Sorbus), and willow (Salix).

Adult Food: Nectar of flowers from a variety of plants including wild cherry and lilac (Syringa vulgaris). Milkweed (Asclepias) and Joe-Pye Weed [Eupatorium] are favorites in summer.

Habitat: Deciduous broadleaf woods, forest edges, river valleys, parks, and suburbs.

Range: Eastern North America from Ontario south to Gulf coast, west to Colorado plains and central Texas.

Conservation: Not required.

NCGR: G5 - Demonstrably secure globally, though it may be quite rare in parts of its range, especially at the periphery.

Management Needs: None noted.

Family: Hesperiidae

Subfamily: Pyrginae

Identification: Wings are brown-black; hindwing is lobed. Forewing has transparent gold spots; underside of hindwing has a metallic silver band.

Wing Span: 1 3/4 - 2 5/8 inches (4.5 - 6.7 cm).

Life History: Adults perch upside down under leaves at night and on hot or cloudy days. To seek females males perch on branches and tall weeds, and occasionally patrol. Females lay single eggs near the host trees, and the caterpillars must find their proper host. Young caterpillars live in a folded leaf shelter; older ones live in a nest of silked-together leaves. Chrysalids hibernate.

Flight: Two broods from May-September in most of the East, a single brood to the north and west, three-four broods from February-December in the Deep South.

Caterpillar Hosts: Many woody legumes including black locust (Robinia pseudacacia), honey locust (Gleditsia triacanthos) and false indigo (Amorpha species). Also selected herbaceous legumes such s Glycyrrhiza species.

Adult Food: The Silver-spotted Skipper almost never visits yellow flowers but favors blue, red, pink, purple, and sometimes white and cream-colored ones. These include everlasting pea, common milkweed, red clover, buttonbush, blazing star, and thistles.

Habitat: Disturbed and open woods, foothill streamcourses, prairie waterways.

Range: Extreme southern Canada and most of the continental United States except the Great Basin and west Texas; northern Mexico.

Conservation: Not usually required.

NCGR: G5 - Demonstrably secure globally, though it may be quite rare in parts of its range, especially at the periphery.

Management Needs: None reported.

Wildchild on Apr 16, 2017:

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APDG ~† 🍓Easter🍩Foods🍰&🍪Sweets🍭

MissPaula on Apr 15, 2017:

CraftyMommaonaBUDGET on Apr 15, 2017:

I don't remember thanking you for The Eatser card you sent me, BUT, thanks so much I received it on Friday I been very busy. Happy Easter to you and your family and God bless. I will be snail mailing you shortly

pkpeace on Apr 15, 2017:

Wildchild on Apr 14, 2017:

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APDG ~†Happy Easter👯Deco🐰Swap🌼

athousandyears on Apr 14, 2017:

Hey, I'm decorating your profile for the EF ~ Butterfly Deco Swap :)

I chose our favorite butterflies from the species we can see in our country (Italy). Now you can see them too.

Vanessa-cardui

It is a migratory butterfly which alights on most flowering plants. However, its favorite plant remains the thistle. We can see it from May until October.

Papilio-machaon

This butterfly prefers all nectar-rich flowers. It is one of the most beautiful species to be found in Italy and flies here from April until September.

Melitaea didyma

It can be found both in the gardens and over the flowering meadows. It flies from May until September and its main feature is that it produces three generations per year.

Parnassius-apollo

According to scientists this rare species (subspecies of the most common butterfly Apollo) has refuged on Sicilian Apennines during the last glaciation, differing from other species and giving birth to this rare endemism.

Callophrys-rubi

This butterfly flies from March until May on damaged lands and among broom and heather.

We hope you'll enjoy them all.

x

Kindest regards, -A.

athousandyears on Apr 13, 2017:

Hey, I'm decorating your profile for the APDG ~ Easter Foods & Sweets Deco Swap :)

Easter

Easter

Easter

Easter

Easter

Easter

Easter

Easter

x

Kindest regards, -A.

MaryWolfe on Apr 13, 2017:

I don't remember how to put the pretty pictures up, but wanted to let you know I got your package today and love the coasters and the cross! Thank you so very much! I most certainly will use them!

tatntole on Apr 13, 2017:

EF - Poetry

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