Guardian Nature School Team Contact Blog Project Noah Facebook Project Noah Twitter

A worldwide community photographing and learning about wildlife

Join Project Noah!
nature school apple icon

Project Noah Nature School visit nature school

Essex Skipper

Thymelicus lineola

Notes:

Life History: To find receptive females, males patrol grassy areas with a low meandering flight. Females lay eggs in strings on the host plant stem; the eggs overwinter and hatch the following spring. Caterpillars eat leaves and live in shelters of leaves tied together with silk. Adult skippers roost at night on grass stalks and in the morning bask with their wings at a 70 degree angle. Flight: One brood from mid-May to mid-July. Caterpillar Hosts: Timothy (Phleum pratense) and other grasses. Adult Food: Nectar from low-growing flowers including orange hawkweed, thistles, ox-eye daisy, fleabane, white clover, red clover, selfheal, Deptford pink, common milkweed, and swamp milkweed. Habitat: Open grassy places including meadows, hayfields, pastures, abandoned homesteads, grassy road edges. Range: This skipper was introduced accidently to North America in 1910 through London, Ontario. Eastern population: Newfoundland west to eastern North Dakota, south to southern Illinois and western South Carolina. Western population: western Colorado, Idaho, Montana, and British Columbia. The range is still expanding, perhaps due to the relocation of eggs in hay shipments.

Species ID Suggestions



Sign in to suggest organism ID

No Comments

Aarongunnar
Spotted by
Aarongunnar

Menomonie, Wisconsin, USA

Spotted on Jul 9, 2015
Submitted on Oct 9, 2016

Related Spottings

European Skipper Skipper Thymelicus sylvestris European Skipper

Nearby Spottings

Black-eyed-Susan Northern Pearly-eye Question Mark Large-Flowered Beard-Tongue

Reference

Noah Guardians
Noah Sponsors
join Project Noah Team

Join the Project Noah Team