butterfly$10392$ - traducción al español
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butterfly$10392$ - traducción al español

SPECIES OF BUTTERFLY
Malachite (butterfly); Malachite Butterfly; Malachite butterfly

butterfly      
n. mariposa
butterfly         
  • Eggs of black-veined white (''[[Aporia crataegi]]'') on [[apple]] leaf
  • 100px
  • Alice in Wonderland]]'', c. 1865
  • Overwintering monarchs cluster on [[oyamel]] trees near [[Angangueo]], Mexico.
  • 100px
  • 100px
  • An [[Australian painted lady]] feeding on a flowering shrub
  • speckled wood]] (''Pararge aegeria'') distract predators from attacking the head. This insect can still fly with a damaged left hindwing.
  • [[Braconid]] [[parasitoid]]al wasp (''[[Apanteles]]'' species) cocoons attached to lime butterfly (''[[Papilio demoleus]]'') caterpillar
  • A serving tray decorated with butterfly wings
  • A butterfly from the genus ''[[Euploea]]'', laying eggs underneath the leaf
  • Life cycle of the monarch butterfly
  • ''Heteronympha merope'' taking off
  • ''Der Schmetterlingsjäger'' (The butterfly hunter) painting by [[Carl Spitzweg]], 1840
  • lycaenid]] caterpillar, ''[[Catapaecilma major]]''
  • [[Chrysalis]] of [[gulf fritillary]]
  • Possibly the original butter-fly.<ref name=BugsBritannica/> A male brimstone (''[[Gonepteryx rhamni]]'') in flight
  • countershaded]] caterpillar of a hawkmoth, ''[[Ceratomia amyntor]]''
  • journal=PLOS Biology}}</ref>
  • 100px
  • The wings of butterflies, here ''[[Aglais io]]'', are covered with coloured scales.
  • Unlike butterflies, most moths (like ''[[Laothoe populi]]'') fly by night and hide by day.
  • 100px
  • 100px
  • 100px
  • greater pignut]]
  • Monarch]] migration route
  • [[Nō]] robe Japan 1700s. Silk embroidered with silk thread and stenciled with gold foil
  • mimetic]], resembling a bird dropping.
  • 100px
  • Aposematic]] caterpillar of ''[[Papilio machaon]]'', in threat pose
  • An adult ''[[Parthenos sylvia]]'' butterfly
  • A butterfly in the coat of arms of [[Perho]]
  • 100px
  • The male small skipper (''[[Thymelicus sylvestris]]'') has [[pheromone]]-releasing "sex brands" (dark line) on the upperside of its forewings.
  • Butterfly and Chinese [[wisteria]], by Xü Xi. Early [[Song Dynasty]], c. 970
  • Thebes]]. c. 664–525 BC
GROUP OF INSECTS IN THE ORDER LEPIDOPTERA
Butterflys; Butterflies; Rhopalocera; Butterfly life cycle; Buttetrfly; 🦋; Life cycles of butterflies; Butterflies in folklore; Butterflies as pets; Butterfly keeping
mariposa
butterfly         
  • Eggs of black-veined white (''[[Aporia crataegi]]'') on [[apple]] leaf
  • 100px
  • Alice in Wonderland]]'', c. 1865
  • Overwintering monarchs cluster on [[oyamel]] trees near [[Angangueo]], Mexico.
  • 100px
  • 100px
  • An [[Australian painted lady]] feeding on a flowering shrub
  • speckled wood]] (''Pararge aegeria'') distract predators from attacking the head. This insect can still fly with a damaged left hindwing.
  • [[Braconid]] [[parasitoid]]al wasp (''[[Apanteles]]'' species) cocoons attached to lime butterfly (''[[Papilio demoleus]]'') caterpillar
  • A serving tray decorated with butterfly wings
  • A butterfly from the genus ''[[Euploea]]'', laying eggs underneath the leaf
  • Life cycle of the monarch butterfly
  • ''Heteronympha merope'' taking off
  • ''Der Schmetterlingsjäger'' (The butterfly hunter) painting by [[Carl Spitzweg]], 1840
  • lycaenid]] caterpillar, ''[[Catapaecilma major]]''
  • [[Chrysalis]] of [[gulf fritillary]]
  • Possibly the original butter-fly.<ref name=BugsBritannica/> A male brimstone (''[[Gonepteryx rhamni]]'') in flight
  • countershaded]] caterpillar of a hawkmoth, ''[[Ceratomia amyntor]]''
  • journal=PLOS Biology}}</ref>
  • 100px
  • The wings of butterflies, here ''[[Aglais io]]'', are covered with coloured scales.
  • Unlike butterflies, most moths (like ''[[Laothoe populi]]'') fly by night and hide by day.
  • 100px
  • 100px
  • 100px
  • greater pignut]]
  • Monarch]] migration route
  • [[Nō]] robe Japan 1700s. Silk embroidered with silk thread and stenciled with gold foil
  • mimetic]], resembling a bird dropping.
  • 100px
  • Aposematic]] caterpillar of ''[[Papilio machaon]]'', in threat pose
  • An adult ''[[Parthenos sylvia]]'' butterfly
  • A butterfly in the coat of arms of [[Perho]]
  • 100px
  • The male small skipper (''[[Thymelicus sylvestris]]'') has [[pheromone]]-releasing "sex brands" (dark line) on the upperside of its forewings.
  • Butterfly and Chinese [[wisteria]], by Xü Xi. Early [[Song Dynasty]], c. 970
  • Thebes]]. c. 664–525 BC
GROUP OF INSECTS IN THE ORDER LEPIDOPTERA
Butterflys; Butterflies; Rhopalocera; Butterfly life cycle; Buttetrfly; 🦋; Life cycles of butterflies; Butterflies in folklore; Butterflies as pets; Butterfly keeping
(n.) = mariposa
Ex: They aren"t going in with a definite title and author who they absolutely have to have, the fourth edition, or a certain translation; in other words, they"ve been given an assignment on butterflies.
----
* butterfly valve = válvula de mariposa

Definición

butterfly bush
¦ noun a buddleia cultivated for its large spikes of fragrant purplish-lilac or white flowers. [Buddleia davidii.]

Wikipedia

Siproeta stelenes

Siproeta stelenes (malachite) is a Neotropical brush-footed butterfly (family Nymphalidae). The malachite has large wings that are black and brilliant green or yellow-green on the upperside and light brown and olive green on the underside. It is named for the mineral malachite, which is similar in color to the bright green on the butterfly's wings. Typically, the wingspread is between 8.5 and 10 cm (3.3 and 3.9 in). The malachite is found throughout Central and northern South America, where it is one of the most common butterfly species. Its distribution extends as far north as southern Texas and the tip of Florida, to Cuba as subspecies S. s. insularis (Holland, 1916), and S. s. biplagiata, and south to Brazil.

Adults feed on flower nectar, rotting fruit, dead animals, and bat dung. Females lay eggs on the new leaves of plants in the family Acanthaceae, especially ruellia. The larvae are horned, spiny, black caterpillars with red markings, The pupa stage is green and have sharp, gold spines that can puncture predators.

Malachites often are confused with Philaethria dido. They have similar coloration, but their wing shapes are different.