Cercyonis

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Cercyonis
Common Wood Nymph.jpg
Common wood nymph, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
Scientific classification OOjs UI icon edit-ltr.svg
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Family: Nymphalidae
Subtribe: Maniolina
Genus: Cercyonis
Scudder, 1875
Species

See text

Cercyonis is a genus of butterflies of the subfamily Satyrinae in the family Nymphalidae found in North America. They are commonly called wood-nymphs or wood nymphs.

Cercyonis pegala Cercyonis.jpg
Cercyonis pegala

Species

Listed alphabetically: [1]

Related Research Articles

Goggle eye or goggle-eye may refer to:

<i>Idea</i> (butterfly) Genus of brush-footed butterflies

Idea is a genus of butterflies known as tree nymphs or paper butterflies. The member species are concentrated around South-East Asia. See Sevenia for the genus of African tree nymphs. These slender butterflies have very large, papery white wings with black veins and markings. They stay high up in the treetops where they flap around in slow flight. Like most other monarch butterflies, wood nymphs are poisonous, and the striking colour patterns signal this. Several butterflies from other groups mimic these patterns.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Danaini</span> Tribe of butterflies

The Danaini are a tribe of brush-footed butterflies. The tribe's type genus Danaus contains the well-known monarch butterfly and is also the type genus of the tribe's subfamily, the milkweed butterflies (Danainae).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Common wood-nymph</span> Species of butterfly

The common wood-nymph is a North American species of butterfly in the family Nymphalidae. It is also known as the wood-nymph, grayling, blue-eyed grayling, and the goggle eye.

Wood nymph is another term for a dryad in Ancient Greek mythology.

<i>Eurema mexicana</i> Species of butterfly

Eurema mexicana, the Mexican yellow, sometimes called the wolf-face sulphur, is a North and South American butterfly in the family Pieridae. It occurs mainly in Mexico but occasionally is found in central and southwestern United States and rarely in Canada.

<i>Glaucopsyche lygdamus</i> Species of butterfly

Glaucopsyche lygdamus, the silvery blue, is a small butterfly native to North America.

<i>Cercyonis oetus</i> Species of butterfly

Cercyonis oetus, the small wood-nymph or dark wood-nymph, is a butterfly of the family Nymphalidae. It is found in western North America.

<i>Biblis hyperia</i> Species of butterfly

Biblis hyperia, the red rim or crimson-banded black, is a species of brush-footed butterfly that is native to the lower Rio Grande Valley of Texas in the United States, Mexico, the Caribbean, Central America, and South America as far south as Paraguay. Its genus Biblis is so far monotypic, but at least one other undescribed species is suspected to exist.

<i>Sevenia</i> Genus of brush-footed butterflies

Sevenia, commonly called tree nymphs, is a genus of forest butterflies in the family Nymphalidae that, as larvae, feed on plants of the family Euphorbiaceae. There are fourteen species from continental Africa and two species from Madagascar. See Idea for the genus of Southeast Asian tree nymphs.

<i>Sevenia boisduvali</i> Species of butterfly

Sevenia boisduvali, the Boisduval's tree nymph, is a butterfly in the family Nymphalidae. There are four subspecies; all native to Africa.

<i>Cercyonis sthenele</i> Species of butterfly

Cercyonis sthenele, the Great Basin wood-nymph, is a North American butterfly in the family Nymphalidae.

<i>Ideopsis gaura</i> Species of butterfly

Ideopsis gaura, the smaller wood nymph, is a species of nymphalid butterfly in the Danainae subfamily. It is found in Southeast Asia.

<i>Cercyonis meadii</i> Species of butterfly

Cercyonis meadii, or Mead's wood nymph, is a species of brush-footed butterfly in the family Nymphalidae. It was first described by William Henry Edwards in 1872 and it is found in North America.

References

  1. "Cercyonis Scudder, 1875" at Markku Savela's Lepidoptera and Some Other Life Forms