Limenitis weidemeyerii

Limenitis weidemeyerii

"Limenitis weidemeyerii", or Weidemeyer's admiral, is a butterfly from the subfamily Nymphalinae, found in western North America.
Weidemeyer's admiral  Geotagged,Limenitis weidemeyerii,Summer,United States

Appearance

The Weidemeyer's admiral's wings are black and white on the dorsal side, with rows of white spots across the wings. On the ventral side, the black is replaced by brown with gray markings along the margins of the hindwing. The larvae feed on aspen and cottonwood, willows, oceanspray, and shadbush. Adults feed on tree sap, carrion, and flower nectar.

Naming

* White admiral
⤷  Lorquin's admiral

Distribution

"Limenitis weidemeyerii" is found in western Canada, the northern Great Plains, and the Western United States, from the Rocky Mountains westward to the Sierra Nevada and California. It is named after John William Weidemeyer, a 19th-century entomologist whose specimen from the Rocky Mountains was used to describe the species.

References:

Some text fragments are auto parsed from Wikipedia.

Status: Unknown
EX EW CR EN VU NT LC
Taxonomy
KingdomAnimalia
DivisionArthropoda
ClassInsecta
OrderLepidoptera
FamilyNymphalidae
GenusLimenitis
SpeciesL. weidemeyerii