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Junonia oenone, the blue pansy or dark blue pansy, is a Nymphalid butterfly native to Africa. [2] [3] "Blue pansy" is also used in India to describe Junonia orithya. [1]
Junonia orithya is a nymphalid butterfly with many subspecies occurring from Africa, through southern and south-eastern Asia, and in Australia. [1] [2] [3] In India, its common English name is the blue pansy, [2] [3] but in southern Africa it is known as the eyed pansy as the name blue pansy refers to Junonia oenone.
dark blue pansy: Madagascar, Aldabra, Astove, Assumption and Cosmoledo Island. Junonia orithya (Linnaeus, 1758) eyed pansy or blue pansy: south-eastern Asia, Cambodia and in Australia Junonia pacoma Grishin, 2020: Pacific mangrove buckeye: western Mexico. Junonia rhadama (Boisduval, 1833) brilliant blue
Junonia orithya (blue pansy) Dorsal view (male) Dorsal view (female) Ventral view (male) Ventral view (female) Pupa. Genus: Kallima (oakleaves)
Euploea mulciber barsine Fruhstorfer, 1904 striped blue crow; Euploea phaenareta juvia Fruhstorfer, 1908 ※extinct; Euploea swainson (Godart, 1824) ※vagrant; Euploea sylvester swinhoei Wallace & Moore, 1866 double-branded black crow; Euploea tulliolus (Fabricius, 1793) E. t. koxinga Fruhstorfer, 1908; E. t. pollita Erichson, 1834 ※vagrant ...
Junonia westermanni, the blue spot pansy, is a butterfly of the family Nymphalidae. It is found in the central part of the Afrotropical realm. female, upper and ...
Chou Io,1998 Classification and Identification of Chinese Butterflies Field Identification Guide 848 colour photos derived from Monographia Rhopalocerorum Sinensium ISBN 7534920124 Lists 1,317 species from China, 92 more species than those in Monographia Rhopalocerorum Sinensium (1994). Three new tribes have been established.
The lemon pansy is a very active butterfly and can be seen basking with its wings open facing the sun. It sits very low to the ground and can be approached easily. It feeds with its wings half open. It is a fairly strong flier and flies close to the ground with rapid wingbeats and often returns to settle back in the same spots. [3] [4]