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Gulf Fritillary Larva

Agraulis vanillae

Description:

The larva or caterpillar of the Gulf Fritillary grows to approximately 4 cm (1.6 in) in length and is bright orange in color and covered in rows of black spines on its head and back. The spines are soft to the touch and do not sting. However, the larvae are poisonous if eaten, as the bright coloration advertises. The larvae feed exclusively on species of passion flower such as Maypop (Passiflora incarnata), Yellow Passionflower (P. lutea) and Running Pop (P. foetida). Their toxic flesh provides Gulf Fritillary caterpillars with excellent protection from predators.[3] Many birds avoid them.[4] Some specialized insects are observed feeding on them, however, and larger caterpillars sometimes eat smaller ones. This species belongs to the "orange" Batesian mimicry complex. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gulf_Fritil...

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4 Comments

Wilsons
Wilsons 11 years ago

Thanks Aaron

Aaron_G
Aaron_G 11 years ago

I agree with the gulf fritillary larva ID.

Reza Hashemizadeh
Reza Hashemizadeh 11 years ago

Hey Wilson, here a link to it http://bugguide.net/node/view/652795/bgi...

Wilsons
Wilsons 11 years ago

gulf fritillary?

Wilsons
Spotted by
Wilsons

Nashville-Davidson, Tennessee, USA

Spotted on Sep 22, 2012
Submitted on Sep 22, 2012

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Gulf Fritillary Agraulis vanillae Borboleta-do-maracujá (Agraulis butterfly) Gulf fritillary

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Reference

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