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Close up of a beautiful butterfly
scarce large blue butterfly insect colorful wings beautiful animal
tiny butterfly on green plant, Neolycaena soezen, Soezen`s Pseudocopper
Beaiful blue bBeaiful silver-studded blue butterfly on yellow flowerutterfly on yellow flower, Copuspece.Beauty in nature,
Lepidoptera insect on wild plants, North China
Common blue Butterflies at rest with closed wings
Brown Argus butterfly on a blade of grass in a nature reserve. Stukeley Meadows Nature Reserve Huntingdon, Cambridgeshire.
tortoiseshell butterfly on a flower
Two small blues sit on the top of dry grass in autumn and unite for the purpose of reproduction.
Polyommatus icarus is a common resident in the Netherlands.\nHabitat: The species occurs in a variety of flower-rich places, irrespective of nutrient level, pH or humidity. habitats include waste ground, grasslands and roadside verges.\nFood plants: Several species of Fabaceae serve as larval food plant.\nFlight Season: Common Blue flies in two, sometimes three generations from mid-May until the end of August, and hibernates as a half-grown caterpillar.\nDistribution: A common species in a great part of Europe, except the north of Scandinavia.\n\nThis Butterfly is one of the most common Blue Butterflies in the Netherlands.
Monarch Butterflies Landing on Goldenrod Horizontal image
Blue butterfly on stonecrop, Summer in the Eifel,Germnay.
Monarch, Danaus plexippus is a milkweed butterfly (subfamily Danainae) in the family Nymphalidae butterfly in nature habitat
The Marbled White is a distinctive and attractive black and white butterfly, unlikely to be mistaken for any other species.
Common Blue or Polyommatus icarus, Small blue butterfly
Gulf Fritillary butterfly in Costa Rica
Common Blue butterfly sitting on a flower with winged wings
Brenthis daphne, the marbled fritillary, is a butterfly of the family Nymphalidae.\nDescription:\nBrenthis daphne has a wingspan of 30–44 millimeters. Wings are rather rounded, the basic color of the upper side of the forewings is bright orange, with an incomplete black marginal band. The underside of the hindwings have a yellowish postdiscal band and the marginal area is completely suffused with purple, with a marble effect (hence the common name).  The quadrangular patch on the underside hindwing is partially shaded orange pink to outer side. The chrysalis has two dorsal rows of thorns with bright spots and a bright metallic shine.\nThis species is very similar to the lesser marbled fritillary (Brenthis ino), but the latter is slightly smaller and the coloration of said patch is completely yellow.\nBiology:\nThe butterfly flies from late May to early August depending on the location. The eggs are laid separately in July on the leaves of the host plants. The larvae feed on brambles (Rubus fruticosus), raspberry (Rubus idaeus), Rubus caesius, Rubus sachalinensis, Sanguisorba officinalis and Filipendula species, while adults usually feed on nectar from brambles, thistles and other flowers. This species is univoltine. It overwinters at the caterpillar stage in the egg shell. \nDistribution and habitat:\nThis widespread species is present in the Palearctic ecozone from the southern parts of the continental Europe (northern Spain, southern France, Germany, Italy and eastwards to Slovakia and Greece), up to Caucasus, western Siberia. It prefers warm and sunny forest edges, woodland and bushy areas where the host plants grow, at an elevation of 75–1,750 meters above sea level (source Wikipedia).\n\nThis Picture is made during a Vacation in Bulgaria in May 2018.
butterfly on the flower in spring
Aricia montensis
butterfly feeding on flowers, Anatolian Zephyr Blue , Plabejus modicus
A Banded Demoiselle poised on dead grass head in sunlight
A Julia heliconian butterfly nectaring on a pink flowering plant in the garden with blur background
macro shot of blue butterfly with soft green yellow background
The brown butterfly clearly showing the distinctive pattern on the underside of its wing.
Great spangled fritillary, fluttering over summer wildflowers (joe-pye weed) as it feeds, with the focus on the eyes and head. The butterfly's striking pattern inspires its name. The Latin word fritillus means chessboard or dice box.
Lycaena phlaeas
Common blue butterfly (Polyommatus icarus)
A close up of the butterfly (Limenitis populi ussuriensis) on moss.
Butterfly
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