Phoebis
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Phoebis | |
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Phoebis avellaneda specimen | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Class: | Insecta |
Order: | Lepidoptera |
Family: | Pieridae |
Subfamily: | Coliadinae |
Tribe: | Coliadini |
Genus: | Phoebis Hübner, [1819] |
Species | |
See text[1] | |
Synonyms | |
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Phoebis (or Sulphurs) is a genus of butterflies, belonging to the Coliadinae subfamily of the "Whites" or Pieridae. They are native to the Americas.
Selected species
- Phoebis agarithe (Boisduval, [1836]) – Orange Giant Sulphur, Large Orange Sulphur (southern USA to Peru)
- Phoebis argante (Fabricius, 1775) – Apricot Sulphur, Argante Giant Sulphur (Mexico to Peru and Brazil, Caribbean)
- Phoebis avellaneda (Herrich-Schäffer, 1865) – Red-splashed Sulphur (Cuba)
- Phoebis bourkei (Dixey, 1933) (Ecuador)
- Phoebis editha (Butler, 1870) – Edith's Sulphur (Haiti)
- Phoebis neocypris (Hübner, [1823]) – Tailed Sulphur (Mexico to Peru, Brazil)
- Phoebis philea (Linnaeus, 1763) – Orange-barred (Giant) Sulphur, Yellow Apricot (Mexico to Peru, Brazil, Cuba, Hispaniola)
- Phoebis sennae (Linnaeus, 1758) – Cloudless Giant Sulphur, Cloudless Sulphur, Common Yellow (southern North America to South America)
Moved:
- Phoebis orbis moved to Aphrissa orbis (Poey, 1832) – Orbed Sulphur
References
Gallery
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Orange-barred Sulphur
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Cloudless Sulphur, Monsanto Insectarium, St. Louis Zoo
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