Dakota Skipper

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Dakota Skipper

Conservation status
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Superfamily: Hesperioidea
Family: Hesperiidae
Subfamily: Hesperiinae
Genus: Hesperia
Species: H. dacotae
Binomial name
Hesperia dacotae
(Linnaeus, 1758)

The Dakota Skipper (Hesperia dacotae) is a small to medium sized North American butterfly. It has a wingspan of approximately one inch and the antennae form a hook. The male’s wings are a tawny-orange to brown on the forewings with a prominent mark and dusty yellow on the lower part of the wing. The female wing is a darker brown orange and white spots on the forewing margin.

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[edit] Reproduction

The adult Dakota Skippers are active for only three weeks in June and July which is their total lifespan. Their eggs, which are laid on the underside of leaves, are hatched in July and the caterpillar larvae feed on native grass until they go dormant in late summer. The caterpillar larvae then winter in shelters very close to the ground. In spring they come out of dormancy in their adult form. They are found in healthy natural tall grass and prairie grass from Minnesota to Saskatchewan. They are now considered extinct in Illinois and Iowa. The largest most stable population is now found in North Dakota.

[edit] Candidate species

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has placed the Dakota Skipper butterfly on the Candidate list for the Endangered Species Act because of declining populations from development of native prairie for grazing, herbicide use and building. The Dakota Skipper has had a priority of eleven on a scale one to twelve on the candidate list since 1975.

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