What
is a Butterfly?![]()
Butterflies are beautiful, flying insects with large scaly
wings. Like all insects, they have six jointed legs, 3 body parts, a pair of
antennae, compound eyes, and an exoskeleton. The three body parts are the head,
thorax (the chest), and abdomen (the tail end).
The butterfly's body is covered by tiny sensory hairs. The four wings and the
six legs of the butterfly are attached to the thorax. The thorax contains the
muscles that make the legs and wings move.
FLYING
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Butterflies are very good fliers. They have two pairs of large wings covered with colorful, iridescent scales in overlapping rows. Lepidoptera (butterflies and moths) are the only insects that have scaly wings. The wings are attached to the butterfly's thorax (mid-section). Veins support the delicate wings and nourish them with blood.
Butterflies can only fly if their body temperature is above 86 degrees. Butterflies sun themselves to warm up in cool weather. As butterflies age, the color of the wings fades and the wings become ragged.
The speed varies among butterfly species (the
poisonous varieties are slower than non-poisonous varieties). The fastest
butterflies (some skippers) can fly at about 30 mile per hour or faster. Slow
flying butterflies fly about 5 mph.
LIFE-CYCLE OF A BUTTERFLY
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Butterflies and moths undergo complete metamorphosis in which they go through four different life stages.
DIET
Caterpillars spend most of their time eating leaves
using strong mandibles (jaws). A caterpillar's first meal, however, is its own
eggshell. A few caterpillars are meat-eaters; the larva of the carnivorous
Harvester butterfly eats woolly aphids.
Butterflies and moths can only sip liquid food using a
tube-like proboscis, which is a long, flexible "tongue." This
proboscis uncoils to sip food, and coils up again into a spiral when not in
use. Most butterflies live on nectar from flowers. Some butterflies sip the
liquid from rotting fruits and a rare few prefer rotting animal flesh or animal
fluids (the Harvester butterfly pierces the bodies of woolly aphids with its
sharp proboscis and drinks the body fluids).
HABITAT
Butterflies are found all over the world and in all
types of environments: hot and cold, dry and moist, at sea level and high in
the mountains. Most butterfly species, however, are found in tropical areas,
especially tropical rainforests.
Many
butterflies migrate in order to avoid adverse environmental conditions (like
cold weather). Butterfly migration is not well understood. Most migrate
relatively short distances (like the Painted Lady, the Red Admiral, and the
Common Buckeye), but a few (like some Monarchs)
migrate thousands of miles.
CLASSIFICATION
Butterflies and moth belong to the order Lepidoptera. Lepidos is Greek for "scales" and ptera means "wing". These scaled wings are
different from the wings of any other insects. Lepidoptera is a very large
group; there are more types of butterflies and moths than there are of any
other type of insects except beetles. It is estimated that there are about
150,000 different species of butterflies and moths (there may be many more).
There are about 28,000 butterfly species worldwide, the rest are moths.
BUTTERFLY FOSSILS
Butterfly fossils are rare. The earliest butterfly
fossils are from the early Cretaceous
period, about 130 million years ago. Their development is closely linked to
the evolution of flowering plants (angiosperms)
since both adult butterflies and caterpillars feed on flowering plants, and the
adults are important pollinators of many flowering plants. Flowering plants
also evolved during the Cretaceous period.
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