Eastern-tailed blue butterfly
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Eastern-tailed blue butterfly |
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Easter-tailed blue butterfly (male)
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Common
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Scientific classification | ||||||||||||||||||
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Everes comyntas comyntas (Godart 1824) |
Eastern-tailed blue (Everes comyntas comyntas) is a common butterfly of eastern North America. Males are generally blue on the upperside of their wings while females are lighter blue to brown or charcoal in coloring, but there are also varieties of purple and pink found in both sexes.[1] The underside coloration ranges from bluish-white to tan. There are two or three (outermost one often faint) black to orange chevron-shaped spots on the rear of the hind wings and a trailing tail off the innermost of the spots. The butterfly is 13⁄16 to 11⁄8 inches (21 to 29 mm) wide with wings outstretched and slightly shorter in length.[2]
Eastern-tailed blue butterflies feed on various legumes and are known to secrete a substance which is favored by some ant species. The ant in turn protects the larva of the butterfly from other predators.
The butterfly is common across eastern North America, and is found as far south as Central America. The Great Plains form a habitat boundary between the Eastern-tailed and the much less common but similar Western-tailed blue butterfly. The central section of California and portions of the states of Oregon and Washington also has Eastern-tailed blues, which likely adapted to the habitat after being brought there inadvertently by man. The species is virtually absent from the Rocky Mountain region. Often found in sunny, open habitat, the butterfly prefers clover, alfalfa and the seeds of various legumes.[1]
[edit] References cited
- ^ a b * Eastern Tailed-Blue (Cupido comyntas). Butterflies and Moths of North America. Montana State University. Retrieved on October 5, 2006.
- ^ Glassberg, Jeffrey (2001). Butterflies of North America. New York: Sterling. ISBN 0-7607-5865-4.