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Great Spangled Fritillary - Speyeria cybele

Classification

 Kingdom: Animalia
 Phylum: Arthropoda
 Class: Insecta
 Order: Lepidoptera
 Family: Nymphalidae
 Genus: Speyeria

Description

great spangled fritillary The wingspan of the great spangled fritillary is 2.5 to 4 inches. It has scalloped orange forewings and hindwings. Females are a darker orange than males. They have black spots on the upperside of their wings and silver spots on the underside.


Range

Map The great spangled fritillary is found from southern British Columbia east to the Canadian Maritimes and south to central California and Northern Georgia.

Habitat

The great spangled fritillary is found in open, moist places including fields, pine and oak woods, conifer forest openings, and meadows.

Diet

great spangled fritillary The great spangled fritillary caterpillar eats the leaves of various violet species. They eat at night. During the day, the caterpillar hides under the leaves. Adults eat the nectar from many species of flowers including milkweeds, thistles, violets, ironweed, dogbane, mountain laurel, verbena, vetch, bergamot, red clover, joe-pye weed, and purple coneflower.

Lifecycle

great spangled fritillaryThe great spangled fritillary mates in June or July. The female lays her pale brown eggs on or near violets in August and September. The caterpillars are black with orange-tipped spines. They overwinter until spring, when they eat young violet leaves.