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Colias alexandra

Species of butterfly From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Colias alexandra
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Colias alexandra, the Queen Alexandra's sulphur, Alexandra sulphur, or ultraviolet sulfur, is a butterfly in the family Pieridae found in western North America. Its range includes Alaska to the Northwest Territories and south to Arizona and New Mexico.[1]

Quick facts Queen Alexandra's sulphur, Scientific classification ...
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Description

Wingspan is from 38 to 57 mm.[1] In the male above similar to Colias philodice, but has more glossy yellow ground colour with orange-yellow tinge, particularly on the hindwing. The under surface, however, is very different in both sexes, namely silver grey on the hindwing with silvery median spot. The female is light yellow, has a small dark distal margin to the forewing or none at all, but black median spot, and is sometimes suffused with orange yellow.

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Biology

Flight period is from mid-May until August.[1]

Larvae feed on Thermopsis, Astragalus, Lathyrus, Oxytropis, and Lupinus species.[1][2]

Subspecies

Listed alphabetically:[2]

  • C. a. alexandra (Utah, Wyoming, Colorado, Montana, South Dakota, Nebraska, Alberta, Saskatchewan)
  • C. a. apache Ferris, 1988 (Arizona, New Mexico)
  • C. a. columbiensis Ferris, 1973 (British Columbia, Alberta, Washington, Idaho, Montana)
  • C. a. edwardsii Edwards, 1870 (Nevada, California, Oregon, Idaho, Washington)

Taxonomy

Colias alexandra and Colias christina have in the past been considered conspecific. Ferris[3] recognized them as separate species in studies, based on geographic distribution, habitat preferences, female wing pattern, and male ultraviolet wing patterns. Colias alexandra is also closely related to, and sympatric with, Colias occidentalis.[4]

References

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