Pieridae

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Pieridae
The Small White (Pieris rapae)
The Small White (Pieris rapae)
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Suborder: Ditrysia
Superfamily: Papilionoidea
Family: Pieridae
Duponchel, 1835
Diversity
76 genera
1,051 species
Subfamilies

Dismorphiinae
Pseudopontiinae
Pierinae
Coliadinae

The Pieridae are a large family of butterflies. There are about 700 species mostly in tropical Africa and Asia. [1]They are characterised by mainly white or yellow coloration, often with black spots. The sexes usually differ, often in the pattern or number of the black markings.

The larvae (caterpillars) of some of these species feed on brassicas, and are agricultural pests.

Males of many species involve in gregarious mud-puddling.[1]

Contents

[edit] Classification

The Pieridae have the radial vein on the forewing with 3 or 4 branches and rarely with 5 branches. The fore legs are well developed unlike in the Nymphalidae and the tarsal claws are bifid unlike in the Papilionidae.[2]

Like the Papilionidae, these too have their pupae held at an angle by a silk girdle, but running at the first abdominal segment unlike the thoracic girdle seen in the Papilionidae.

[edit] Subfamilies

The Pieridae are generally divided into the following subfamilies:

Host plants in the family Fabaceae.[1]

  • Pierinae (55 genera) (Whites, Yellow, Orange-tips)

Host plants in the family Capparidaceae, Brassicaceae, Santalaceae, and Loranthaceae. Many species strongly migratory.[1]

Many species are sexually dimorphic and patterns are visible only under ultraviolet.[1]

  • Pseudopontiinae (sole species Pseudopontia paradoxa endemic to West Africa.

Consists of about 1100 species in about 76 genera.

Cloudless sulfurs mud-puddling on a damp spot, Stuckey, South Carolina
Cloudless sulfurs mud-puddling on a damp spot, Stuckey, South Carolina

[edit] Some popular species

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d e DeVries P. J. in Levin S.A. (ed) 2001 The Encyclopaedia of Biodiversity. Academic Press.
  2. ^ Borror, D.J. , Triplehorn, C. A. and Johnson, N. An Introduction to the Study of Insects. Sixth Edition.

[edit] See also