Phoebis philea
Appearance
Orange-barred sulphur | |
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Adult male - ventral view | |
Adult female | |
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Species: | P. philea
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Binomial name | |
Phoebis philea | |
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Phoebis philea, the orange-barred sulphur, is a species of butterfly found in the Americas including the Caribbean.[1]
The wingspan is 68 to 80 mm.[1] There are two to three generations per year in Florida and one in the northern part of the range with adults on wing from mid to late summer. The species habitat is in tropical scrub, gardens, fields, and forest edges. Orange-barred sulphurs are often found in large dense groups of mixed species, including the statira sulphur (Aphrissa statira), apricot sulphur (Phoebis argante), and the straight-line sulphur (Rhabdodryas trite).[2] The species eats nectar from red-colored plants.
The larvae feed on Cassia species.
Subspecies
- Phoebis philea philea (Linnaeus, 1763) (US to Brazil)
- Phoebis philea huebneri Fruhstorfer, 1907 (Cuba)
- Phoebis philea thalestris (Illiger, 1801) (Hispaniola)
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Pinned specimens, both sides
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Larva
References
- ^ a b Orange-barred Sulphur, Butterflies of Canada
- ^ adrianhoskins@hotmail.co.uk. "Butterflies of Amazonia - Aphrissa statira". www.learnaboutbutterflies.com. Retrieved 2017-11-14.
- P. Brock, Jim; Kaufman, Kenn (2003). Butterflies of North America. New York, New York: Houghtin Mifflin Company. p. 76. ISBN 0-618-25400-5.
- "Orange-barred Sulphur (Phoebis philea)". Learn about Butterflies. Retrieved 2012-04-05.
Categories:
- Coliadinae
- Butterflies of North America
- Butterflies of Central America
- Butterflies of the Caribbean
- Pieridae of South America
- Butterflies of Cuba
- Butterflies of Jamaica
- Butterflies of Mexico
- Butterflies of the United States
- Lepidoptera of Brazil
- Fauna of the Amazon
- Taxa named by Carl Linnaeus
- Butterflies described in 1763
- Pieridae stubs