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The American goldfinch is the state bird of New Jersey. This list of birds of New Jersey includes species credibly documented in the U.S. state of New Jersey and accepted by the New Jersey Bird Records Committee (NJBRC). As of March 2024 the list contained 490 species and a species pair.
Lasiommata paramegaera, the pale wall brown or Corsican wall brown, [1] is a butterfly species belonging to the family Nymphalidae. It is endemic to Corsica and Sardinia. [2] The wingspan is 36–40 mm. The upper and undersides of the fore and hind wings are orange brown, they have a dark brown grid-like pattern.
Forewing with a large median and a much smaller subapical white-centred black ocellus, each with an orange-yellow iris, the upper portion of the iris round the median ocellus very broad, the lower incomplete and a more or less triangular orange-yellow discal patch. Hindwing uniform, with two very small fulvous-ringed black ocelli. [4]
Mycalesis, the bushbrowns, are a genus of brush-footed butterflies. They are common in the warm regions from Central Asia to Australia, and have a high diversity in South Asia and the Wallacea . They are notably polymorphic , with wet- and dry-season forms differing in many species, especially as regards size and number of underwing eyespots .
Vibrant orange butterflies symbolize excitement, transformation, and vitality. White Butterfly Meaning With their radiant, pristine wings, white butterflies are a symbol of purity, innocence, and ...
Common buckeye butterflies are colored mostly brown with some orange, black, white, blue, and magenta. The forewing features two proximal orange bars and a postmedian white band, which surrounds a prominent black eyespot and borders a smaller, more distal eyespot; both eyespots have a bluish center and each border a distal orange mark. The ...
Butterflies are often used as metaphors for undergoing change, trusting the process, and emerging in a totally new — even better — form. White Butterflies as Omens Albert Fertl - Getty Images
Anthocharis midea, the falcate orangetip, is a North American butterfly that was described in 1809 by Jacob Hübner. It belongs to the family Pieridae, which is the white and sulphurs. These butterflies are mostly seen in the eastern United States, and in Texas and Oklahoma. They eat the nectar of violets and mustards.