Soldier | |
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Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Class: | Insecta |
Order: | Lepidoptera |
Family: | Nymphalidae |
Genus: | Danaus |
Species: | D. eresimus |
Binomial name | |
Danaus eresimus (Cramer, 1777) |
The Soldier or Tropical Queen, (Danaus eresimus), is a North and South American butterfly in the family Nymphalidae. Their flight is slow and they are reasonably easy to approach, but will fly for some distance if approached too closely.[1]
Contents |
The upper side of the wings is dark reddish-brown with the fore wing sometimes having white submarginal spots.[2] The veins are lightly marked with black. Males have a black scent patch on each of the hind wings. The underside of the wings is also dark brown with a postmedian band made up of squarish spots.[1] The Soldier has a wingspan of 2½ to 3½ inches.[3]
Similar species in the Soldier's range include the Monarch (Danaus plexippus) and the Queen (Danaus gilippus).
The Monarch is more orange, has heavier black-lined veins, and the underside of the wings is a pale yellowish color.[1][4]
The Queen has nearly no black marked veins, and has white fore wing submarginal spots on both surfaces of the wings.[4]
The Soldier may be found in a variety of open, subtropical habitats such as citrus groves, weedy water edges where host plants occur, dry fields, etc.[1] and in New Mexico.
This butterfly my be encountered from February to December in southern Florida (it is most common in October to December), and from August to January in southern Texas.[1][5]
Males patrol for females.[1] The eggs are bright orange. The black larva is banded with white and yellow stripes. It has a subdorsal row of yellowish-tan spots. There are six black, fleshy filaments, the first pair near the head, the second on the thorax, and the third at the end of the abdomen.[5] The chrysalis is very similar to that of the Monarch, often indistinguishable. It has 3 or more broods per year.[4]
Here is a list of host plants used by the Soldier: