Birds & Blooms

Tropical Beauties

With winter upon us, landscapes can be a little bleak. Luckily, butterfly houses bring amazing species close to home.

Although landscapes can look a little bleak in the winter, there's a simple way to lift your spirits—visit a butterfly house, where vibrant species sail amid tropical plants. Here, meet a few of the butterflies that are common to many butterfly houses.

Postman

Boasting striking, elongated black wings with brilliant reddish-orange stripes, Postman butterflies are easy to spot. Both adults and caterpillars rely on passionflower vines for nourishment. They build immunity to its toxins as caterpillars. The adults live longer than other butterflies, thanks to the passionflower's protein-rich pollen and nectar.

Owl

Found in South American and Central American rain forests, the large-winged yellow and purple butterfly dines primarily on rotting fruit, but their larvae are partial to banana leaves. In fact, banana growers consider these caterpillars a pest.

Thoas Swallowtail

The Thoas swallowtail often is confused with its cousin, the giant swallowtail. This species, which ranges from Brazil north through southern Texas, boasts large, black wings marked with diagonal stripes made up of bright-yellow squares. It sips nectar by hovering like a hummingbird above blossoms.

Blue Morpho

This large, brilliant-blue butterfly makes its home in South America and Central America and some parts of Mexico. At night, they fold up their wings to display the dark side of their wings, which allows them to go unnoticed by predators. During the day, they slowly beat their wings as they fly, producing an iridescent blue flash.

Malachite
Photo: Guy Hill

Malachite

Native to Brazil through Central America and into Mexico, southern Texas, southern Florida and Cuba, the malachite boasts dark-brown to black wings marked with translucent whitish-green or yellow patches (like the one at right). Generally, adults eat rotting fruit, but sometimes feed on flower nectar or bird droppings.

Giant Wood Nymph

A Southeast-Asian cousin of the monarch, this species also is commonly called a paper kite or rice paper butterfly. The "kite" moniker aptly describes its flight pattern. It slowly, but continually glides in a circular pattern high in the trees. Like the monarch, the giant wood nymph has an articulated head, which allows it to turn its head from side to side and look upward.

Julia

Julia butterflies make their home in subtropical clearings and woodland margins from Brazil north to southern Texas and Florida. They're also found in Mexico and the West Indies. Occasionally, the orange-winged butterflies stray as far north as Nebraska. Julias feed on the nectar of firebush, lantana, porterweed and Spanish needles.