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Papilio palamedes

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Kingdom
  
Animalia

Order
  
Lepidoptera

Genus
  
Papilio

Higher classification
  
Papilio

Phylum
  
Arthropoda

Family
  
Papilionidae

Scientific name
  
Papilio palamedes

Rank
  
Species

Papilio palamedes wwwdallasbutterfliescomButterfliespicspalamed

Similar
  
Butterfly, Swallowtail butterfly, Papilio, Butterflies and moths, Insect

Papilio palamedes, the Palamedes swallowtail or laurel swallowtail, is a North American butterfly in the family Papilionidae.

Contents

Description

The upperside of the wings is blackish brown with both wings having a yellow postmedian band and a yellow submarginal band. There is a yellow bar at the end of the forewing cell. The underside of the wings is black with the forewing having a yellow postmedian band and a yellow submarginal band. The hindwing has a few colored bands; the first being cream; the second, orange; the third, blue; and the fourth, orange. There is a yellow streak on the inner margin of the hindwing which runs parallel to the body. The wingspan ranges from 4 12 to 5 18 inches (11 to 13 cm).

Habitat

Papilio palamedes Swallowtail Papilio palamedes

This species may be found in habitats such as cypress swamplands, coastal swamplands, wet riparian forests, bay forests, and savannas.

Flight

Papilio palamedes Swallowtail Papilio palamedes

The Palamedes swallowtail is encountered from May to October in southeastern Virginia and from March to December in more southern regions.

Life cycle

Papilio palamedes Papilio palamedes Wikipedia

Males seek females by patrolling near forest edges and forest openings. In courtship, the male and female will fly about a foot apart, slowly flying together in unison. The male will then fly above and behind the female to disperse his pheromones and he will continue to do this until the female decides to mate with him. Females lay their pale greenish-yellow eggs singly on host plant leaves. The larva is green with two false eyespots on the thorax. It has a few blue spots on the first abdominal segment to the eighth segment. It also lives in a leaf shelter. The larva is almost identical to the caterpillar of the spicebush swallowtail (Papilio troilus, except the spicebush swallowtail larva has larger false eyes, larger blue spots, and different host plant preferences. ) However, in the coastal Southeast, a subspecies of the spicebush swallowtail P. t. ilioneus shares the redbay (Persea borbonia) as a host plant. The green chrysalis has a whitish lateral stripe edged with brown above and has two horns on the head. The chrysalis hibernates. The Palamedes swallowtail has two or three broods per year.

Host plants

  • Redbay, Persea borbonia
  • Swampbay, Persea palustris
  • White sassafras, Sassafras albidum
  • Ecozone

    Nearctic ecozone.

    Papilio palamedes Swallowtail Papilio palamedes

    References

    Papilio palamedes Wikipedia