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Silver-spotted Skipper Butterfly
Epargyreus clarus
33.7748, -84.2963
Field Notes
Description:
These two small-sized butterflies have brown winged with yellow patch and a and white spot. The pair were fluttering together from Lantana flower to flower. They were probably either chasing each other or mating perhaps.
Habitat:
"he adult Silver-spotted skipper occurs in fields, gardens and at forest edges. It ranges from southern Canada throughout most of the United States to northern Mexico; it is absent in the Great Basin and western Texas.[2]
Adults fly throughout the warm part of the year. They have one brood per year in the North and West, two in the East, and three or four in the Deep South.[2]
Females lay single eggs near, not on, the caterpillars' food plants. The caterpillars must find their own way to the plants. Young caterpillars fold leaves to make shelters, and older ones stick leaves together with silk.[2] They overwinter as chrysalids."-Wikipedia
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