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Morphology

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The Mourning Cloak has a wing span of 2.875 to 3.375 in. Its dark maroon wings are characterized by a ragged creamy yellow margin that is lined on the interior by bright blue iridescent spots. When viewed closely, the wings appear to be iridescent as they reflect purple highlights. A rare variation in the appearance of the dorsal side of the wings, in which the margin is wider than normal and the blue spots may be absent, sometimes occurs. This aberration is a result of the pupa's being exposed to unusually cold temperatures. The ventral surface of the Mourning Cloak is a striated pattern of gray-black outlined by a yellow wing margin similar to that found on its dorsal surface (Holland, 1910; Pyle, 1981; Tveten and Tveten, 1996).

Other Physical Features: ectothermic ; bilateral symmetry

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Fonseca, V. 2000. "Nymphalis antiopa" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Nymphalis_antiopa.html
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Vanessa Fonseca, Southwestern University
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Stephanie Fabritius, Southwestern University
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Habitat

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The Mourning Cloak occupies "watercourses, sunny glades, forest borders, parks, gardens, open woodlands, and groves" (Pyle, 1981). During hibernation, it may be found "under the eaves of houses, in cellars, crevices and hollows" (Moucha, 1963).

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Fonseca, V. 2000. "Nymphalis antiopa" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Nymphalis_antiopa.html
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Vanessa Fonseca, Southwestern University
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Stephanie Fabritius, Southwestern University
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Distribution

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The Mourning Cloak occupies an area in North America defined by the tundra line in Canada and Alaska in the north and the region of central Mexico in the south. Its range may extend further southward to northern South America, but it is not native to subtropical locales. Thus, it is usually not found in the southern regions of the states of Texas, Florida, and Louisiana. The Mourning Cloak also inhabits northern Eurasia, where some individuals may wander to England, and the temperate zones of Asia, even as far as Japan (Moucha, 1963; Pyle, 1981; Tveten and Tveten, 1996).

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Fonseca, V. 2000. "Nymphalis antiopa" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Nymphalis_antiopa.html
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Vanessa Fonseca, Southwestern University
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Stephanie Fabritius, Southwestern University
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Trophic Strategy

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The caterpillar of the Mourning Cloak feeds in groups on the leaves of deciduous trees, including the willow, elm, hackberry, cottonwood, poplar, rose, birch, and mulberry trees. The adult butterfly feeds on tree sap by landing above the flow of sap on a tree and bending its head downward to siphon it. It also feeds on rotting fruit. It very rarely feeds on flowers, but, in the summer, the butterfly may feed on the nectar of scabious and knapweed (Klots, 1951; Pyle, 1981; Tveten and Tveten, 1996).

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Fonseca, V. 2000. "Nymphalis antiopa" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Nymphalis_antiopa.html
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Vanessa Fonseca, Southwestern University
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Stephanie Fabritius, Southwestern University
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Benefits

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While the Mourning Cloak's function as a pollinator is minimal because the Mourning Cloak does not usually feed on flowers, it is still existent.

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Fonseca, V. 2000. "Nymphalis antiopa" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Nymphalis_antiopa.html
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Vanessa Fonseca, Southwestern University
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Benefits

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Canada has designated the caterpillar of the Mourning Cloak as a pest that attacks deciduous trees (Moucha, 1963).

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Fonseca, V. 2000. "Nymphalis antiopa" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Nymphalis_antiopa.html
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Vanessa Fonseca, Southwestern University
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Stephanie Fabritius, Southwestern University
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Conservation Status

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The Mourning Cloak enjoys legislative protection in Austria and Switzerland (Feltwell, 1986).

US Federal List: no special status

CITES: no special status

State of Michigan List: no special status

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Fonseca, V. 2000. "Nymphalis antiopa" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Nymphalis_antiopa.html
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Vanessa Fonseca, Southwestern University
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Untitled

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Upon the approach of a predator, the Mourning Cloak makes a "click" sound when flying away from rest (Pyle, 1981).

The first specimens of Nymphalis antiopa ever recorded in England were taken in 1748 in Cool Arbour Lane near Camberwell, giving the butterfly one of its two common names, the "Camberwell Beauty" (Moucha, 1963).

Its scientific name, Nymphalis antiopa, is derived from Greek mythology. Antiope was the leader of the Amazons (Tveten and Tveten, 1996).

The Mourning Cloak enjoys a long life span of ten to eleven months (Tveten and Tveten, 1996).

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Fonseca, V. 2000. "Nymphalis antiopa" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Nymphalis_antiopa.html
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Vanessa Fonseca, Southwestern University
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Stephanie Fabritius, Southwestern University
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Reproduction

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Butterflies undergo complete metamorphosis. The first stage of this process is represented by the egg. The Mourning Cloak lays its eggs in clusters of rings around twigs. The pale colored egg is 0.9 x 0.7 mm and becomes black prior to hatching; this event reveals the second stage of the process, the caterpillar. The caterpillar can grow up to 2 in long and is velvety black with raised white dots and a row of red spots on its mid-dorsal region. The caterpillar's legs are the color of rust, and several long black spines line its body. It associates in groups. The caterpillar undergoes four ecdyses, instances in which the caterpillar sheds its skin. Each ecdysis is called an instar. A fully grown caterpillar has gone through five instars. The latitude and altitude of the population's geographic location determines the number of broods, usually two or three. The next stage is the chrysalis. The chrysalis of the Mourning Cloak hangs upside down from grass stems; the tip of its abdomen is adjoined to the leaf by a silk pad produced by the caterpillar. It may grow up to 28 mm long and its color ranges from tan to gray. It has two head horns, a "beak," and tubercles that run the length of its body. The final stage is the adult butterfly (Feltwell, 1986; Klots, 1951; Moucha, 1963; Pyle, 1981; Tveten and Tveten, 1996).

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Fonseca, V. 2000. "Nymphalis antiopa" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Nymphalis_antiopa.html
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Vanessa Fonseca, Southwestern University
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North American Ecology (US and Canada)

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Nymphalis antiopa is a resident of most of North America from northern Canada and Alaska to Venezuela, and is migratory in some parts of its range. It also occurs throughout Eurasia (Scott 1986). Habitats are deciduous woodland and suburbs from the subtropics to the edge of the arctic tundra. Host plants are mostly trees and include species from many families, including Saliceae, Betulaceae, Aceraceae, Ulmaceae, Moraceae, Oleaceae, Rosaceae, Tiliaceae, Polygonaceae, Aparganiacea. Eggs are laid on the host plant in clusters with up to 250 eggs per clutch. Individuals overwinter as adults. There are variable number of flights each year depending on latitude with one in the northern parts of the range and in high mountains, occurring in late July, two flights further south, occurring late June to Aug. 15, and in the furthest southern part of their range there are probably three flights (Scott 1986).
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Behavior

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Adults feed on flower nectar, sap, fruit and mud. Males perch for females (Scott, 1986).
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Life Cycle

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Le Morio peut pondre jusqu'à 200 oeufs, la femelle les déposant soigneusement autour des tiges. La chenille du Morio, brune à taches orangées sur le dos, se nourrit de feuilles de bouleau, de saule et parfois d'autres arbres comme le peuplier, l'orme, ou le tremble.
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Brief Summary

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Le Morio est un papillon très territorial : il défend son territoire le long des chemins, en lisière de forêt. Ce papillon migrateur a la particularité de se nourrir essentiellement de sève, qu'il trouve sur les troncs d'arbre, et de fruits pourrissant. Les claquements d'ailes du Morio sont caractéristiques, faisant un bruit particulier, audible pour peu qu'on tende un peu l'oreille, et qui permettrait d'intimider un éventuel prédateur. Observation en vol : Fin juin à août. Nombre de générations par an : 1. Milieux de vie : Bois et lisières de forêts, prairies, bords de ruisseaux, parcs et jardins. Apparence Envergure : 55-75 mm. Les ailes du Morio sont de couleur brun violacé, d'aspect velouté, avec une large bordure jaune et une rangée de taches bleues. Le dessous des ailes est proche, mais plus terne, et sans taches bleues.
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Conservation Status

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Not of concern.
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Cyclicity

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One brood per year, appearing in early spring (April to May) and again in August to October.
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Distribution

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This species has a wide distribution throughout the northern hemisphere, occuring from Great Britain across Eurasia and from Alaska south to central Mexico (Opler 1999).
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General Description

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"The deep brown upperside rimmed with blue spots and a powder-yellow margin is unmistakable. Spring specimens are flight-worn and are faded to maroon-brown with yellowish-white margins. The Mourning Cloak is remarakbly consistent in appearance across its vast North American range, and there are no recognized subspecies (Layberry et al. 1998, Guppy & Shepard 2001). "
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Habitat

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Found in virtually all habitats throuhgout the province, particularly near moist and riparian woods.
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Life Cycle

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The eggs are laid in clusters on the hostplant, and the caterpillars initially live in colonies (Scott 1986). The larvae possess branched spines, and are velvety black with small white spots and a line of dorsal red spots (Guppy & Shepard 2001). The adults are one of the longest-lived species in Alberta, and can live to be nearly a year old since they hatch in July or August, overwinter, and are occasionally found into June of the following year. Because they sometimes appear on warm winter days, Mourning Cloaks can be seen in almost any month of the year.
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Trophic Strategy

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The larvae feed on various trees including elm (Ulmus spp.) and poplars (Populus spp.), and particularly willows (Salix spp.) (Layberry et al. 1998). Adults prefer tree sap and mammal scat to flower nectar.
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Nymphalis antiopa

provided by wikipedia EN

Nymphalis antiopa, known as the mourning cloak in North America and the Camberwell beauty in Britain, is a large butterfly native to Eurasia and North America.

The immature form of this species is sometimes known as the spiny elm caterpillar.[2] Other older names for this species include grand surprise and white petticoat. A powerful flier, this species is sometimes found in areas far from its usual range during migration.

These butterflies have a lifespan of 11 to 12 months, one of the longest lifespans for any butterfly.[3]

It is also the state insect of the U.S. state of Montana, adopted in 2001.[4]

Etymology

The specific epithet antiopa is thought to be derived from Antiope, a common name in Greek mythology.[5]

North American name "mourning cloak"

In several European countries with Germanic languages, other than Britain, the name for this butterfly literally translates to "mourning cloak", such as German "Trauermantel", Dutch "rouwmantel", Swedish "sorgmantel", Finnish "suruvaippa" and Norwegian "sørgekåpe". This suggests it is a name which came with Scandinavian or German rather than with British settlers, for whom this species would be considerably less familiar.[6][7] Other common names include: Czech "Černopláštník" . "Babočka osiková". Polish "Rusałka żałobnik". Russian "Траурница" . Japanese "キベリタテハ" . Chinese "黄縁立羽". L. Hugh Newman likened the butterfly's pattern to a girl who, disliking having to be in mourning, defiantly let a few inches of a bright dress show below her mourning dress.

British name "Camberwell beauty"

The name originated from the discovery of two individuals at Coldharbour Lane in Camberwell in August 1748.[8] Camberwell is in South London, about three miles south of London Bridge—in reporting this, the author Moses Harris named the species grand surprise or Camberwell beauty (Bretherton & Emmet, 1990).

Illustration from The Papilios of Great Britain

Distribution

The mourning cloak butterflies are distributed broadly around the northern hemisphere.[9] They are commonly found throughout all of North America and northern Eurasia.[10] Three subspecies of mourning cloak butterflies are found throughout North America: northern Nymphalis antiopa hyperborea Seitz, 1913; eastern N. a. lintnerii Fitch, 1857; southwestern N. a. thomsoni Butler, 1887. They can usually be found in hardwood forests, though they have been found in virtually all habitats.[11] They may also be found as far as the northern part of South America, though they are typically not seen as frequently in southern states such as Florida, Louisiana, or Texas. They are occasionally seen in the more temperate places in Asia, and a few have even been seen in Japan.[8] However, the mourning cloaks tend to be found predominantly in cold, mountainous areas.[8]

Migrants arrive in Great Britain most years during summer and autumn, but numbers are usually very low. There is no evidence that the species breeds in Britain; it is thought that mild, wet winters prevent them from surviving there for very long. The 'Butterfly Farmer' L. Hugh Newman raised thousands for release at his 'farm' in Bexley, but none were seen the following spring. Specimens stored in his refrigerator for the winter, however, survived. In a book he said that Camberwell Beauty catches in England were suspiciously concentrated around London, Hull and Harwich, all these being ports in the timber trade with Scandinavia, and theorized that they had hibernated in stacks of timber which was then shipped to England, and had not traveled naturally.

Morphology

Caterpillar of Nymphalis antiopa

Eggs

Mourning cloak eggs are amber-yellow or pale olive-green when first laid.[12] Upon further development, the coloration of the eggs will change, becoming lilac-pink, and darkening to almost black, as they mature prior to hatching.[3] The eggs are generally 0.7 by 0.9 mm in size.[8] Laid on terminal shoots of the larval food-plant, encircling the stem. Later in season, when the leaves appear, females also lay the eggs on the upper surface.

Larvae

The spiny caterpillars are striking in appearance, with black bodies and a line of eight reddish-orange dots running down the back (aposematic, warning coloration). The prolegs are dark red. The body is covered with short hairs and black spines and white dots.[2] The fully grown mourning cloak caterpillars attain two inches in length.[3]

Pupae

Mourning cloak pupae are on average 0.8 inches (2.0 cm) in length, though they can reach over 1.1 inches (2.8 cm) in length. They tend to be a tan or brown gray, with two rows of sharp, red-tipped spikes protruding from the ventro-lateral side of the pupae. The chrysalis has a "beak", tubercles, and two head horns.[8][13]

Adult

The mourning cloak butterfly is a large, unique butterfly, with special markings that do not match those of any other butterfly, making it easily distinguishable. It can have a wingspan up to four inches. The dorsal side of its wings are a dark maroon, or occasionally brown, with ragged pale-yellow edges. Bright, iridescent blue spots line the black demarcation between the maroon and the yellow.[3] The ventral side of the wings has gray striations, with the same pale-yellow edges.[8] They are a part of the family Nymphalidae, called the brush-footed butterflies due to their hairy front legs. The species does not display any obvious sexual dimorphism.[3]

Reproduction and development

Mating system

Mourning cloak butterflies display polygynous mating behavior, where an individual male will mate with multiple females throughout one breeding season. He will either use a display site to attract females or fly around searching for females that are more widely dispersed in a process called scramble competition polygyny.[14] This means that male mourning cloak butterflies primarily lek, or display territorial behavior, in which they settle and defend desirable areas, such as those that either offer increased probability of females or those that provide ample amounts of good resources.[15] The more desirable territories will be able to increase the males' chances of reproductive success. Thus, lekking maximizes the males' ability to attract the most female butterflies, either by being in a prime location to view them or to have a location that females would want to visit.[16] Locations of choice typically include sunny perches near ravines,[15] wood margins, parks, gardens, lakes, ponds, around stream edges,[17] or canyons in which males can perch and defend for multiple days.[16] These locations can be more than an area of 300 square meters.[8] Given the male-male competition for mating, this strategy offers males an ideal location in order to maximize success in territorial protection, and thus mating.[16] Despite the fact that butterflies, particularly the mourning cloak butterflies, have an affinity for perches on high objects, they are not known to display any hilltopping behavior, where male butterflies fly up to perch on hill summits.[17][18]

Spring marks the beginning of their mating season, when female mourning cloaks will find a host plant and begin to lay their eggs. Adult mourning cloak butterflies can first be seen in late spring through early summer. They then aestivate for the summer, where they will enter into a "dormant" state similar to that of hibernation. In concordance with this is the mourning cloak butterflies' exhibition of diapause,[19] which is a suspension in development in response to certain conditions, such as environmental stimuli. They will break diapause once some, though not all, of the butterflies start to migrate through September and October. They then overwinter, and then restart their mating cycle throughout the spring, from April through June.[10]

Life cycle

Mourning cloaks, like all other butterflies, undergo complete metamorphosis.[8] Egg →Larva (L1 ... L5) → Pupa → Adult. Before the leaves bud-out, Mourning cloaks are known to lay their eggs as ring clusters around the terminal twigs on host plants. The host plant selection is vital because it provides the food source for the young caterpillars. Females are known to have multiple broods,[17] typically up to two to three.[8] The newly hatched caterpillars will group together until they shed their skin—termed an instar for each shedding. This shedding event occurs four times throughout development in a process called ecdysis. The larvae experience a fifth skin shed to produce a fully grown caterpillar.[8] The next stage in the mourning cloak's life cycle is to morph into a pupa and then cocoon in a process that encases the creature in a tan or gray chrysalis, which will hang from the stems of grass. This pupa stage allows for resting and further maturation.[3] This metamorphosis takes approximately fifteen days.[20] Following development as the chrysalis is the emergence of an adult mourning cloak butterfly.[8]

Studies show that the mourning cloaks use endocrine mechanisms similar to other lepidopterans to regulate female specific protein synthesis, oogenesis, and male and female reproductive gland development. Juvenile hormone (JH) is involved in the regulation of oogenesis and development of the male and female reproductive glands in the mourning cloak butterfly.[21]

Behavior

The adult butterflies hibernate during the winter months. Typical locations of overwintering include tree cavities and on the ground underneath loose tree bark (covered by snow).[3] They often emerge from hibernation before the snow has completely melted, making it one of the first butterflies to take wing in the spring.[8]

The mourning cloak is a non-migratory species but some sources suggest that a portion of the North American population migrates southward.[5] Experiments carried out in Germany by Hubert Roer in 1962-68, documented a long-distance (one way) migration from Bonn to Greece (Chalkiditi).[22]

Ecology

Mourning cloak nectaring on cherry blossoms

Larval food-plants

Upon hatching, the caterpillars will begin to eat the leaves of the larval food-plant. A large number of food-plant plants was recorded, such as willow (Salix nigra, Salix pentandra, Salix caprea, Salix aurita, Salix cinerea, Salix phylicifolia), American elm, hackberry, hawthorn, wild rose, Betula species (Betula verrucosa, Betula chinensis), Alnus incana and poplar.[9] The caterpillars live gregariously in communal silken nest on the host-plant, until they disperse prior to pupation.[3]

Adult mourning cloaks primarily feed on sap, ripe and fallen fruits and sugary exudate from aphids, very rarely seen nectaring on flowers.[23]

Predation

The mourning cloak butterfly faces many predators throughout its development. The mourning cloak's eggs can be eaten by predators such as beetles, true bugs, ants, beetle larvae, wasps, assassin bugs, and mites.[20] Some of the butterflies' major predators include praying mantises, assassin bugs, dragon flies, and vertebrate predators such as birds, reptiles, amphibians, and mammals.

Defense mechanisms

An anti-predation mechanism the mourning cloaks have employed as adult butterflies is camouflage. To do this, the butterflies fold their wings back when attached to trees as their folded wings will provide camouflage against the dark backdrop of the trees.[3][8]

An additional anti-predation tactic used by the mourning cloaks is to join together with other butterflies in a perch and fly menacingly towards their attackers—most often birds or other butterflies.

Mourning cloaks also play dead by closing their wings tightly together and tucking their legs up against their body for protection and holding completely still. They’ll maintain this for a few minutes before returning to their natural healthy and lively behavior.

Further defense mechanisms include loud clicks when the mourning cloak flies away from a predator.[24]

To protect themselves from the cold weather of their habitats, mourning cloaks will find areas under direct sunlight. This behavior, in conjunction with their darkly-colored wings, allow for maximum heat absorption.[8]

Newly hatched mourning cloak caterpillars can display selfish behavior, such as siblicide, by eating non-hatched eggs.[20] The larvae also group together for the duration of their development, preventing some predation by numbers.[14] The larvae and pupae can also respond to disturbances by twitching simultaneously – this may be performed as a defense mechanism.[8]

Pollination

Mourning cloak butterflies are not known to be significant pollinators, since their primary food source is sap of deciduous trees rather than flowering plants. However, they still can occasionally act as pollinators.[8][25]

Relationship to people

Pests

On occasions, the gregarious mourning cloak larvae will completely defoliate ornamental trees, in nurseries, plantations, and parks. Some areas that this damage has been documented has been Oregon and Canada.[26][27] The young willows and poplars could be completely defoliated due to the caterpillars, though mature trees tend not to be affected.[26]

Research

Mourning cloak butterflies have been a part of some epigenetics experiments testing to determine if the environment affects certain butterfly phenotypic characteristics. Scientists hypothesized that traumatic heat or cold shocks "during a critical period of its development can cause profound changes". The first experiments occurred in the 1890s. The mourning cloaks were temperature shocked at specific times in their development, which led to differences in pupae color. It was later learned that the color change was due to hormonal changes in response to varying temperatures.[28]

Conservation

Mourning cloak butterflies are protected by law in Switzerland and Austria,[29] though they generally have an increasing trend regarding population density in Finland.[30] They also assume "safe" status in the Czech Republic.[31] In general, the mourning cloak butterflies find areas that have experienced fire breaks to be more inviting,[32] presumably because the fire breaks increase the amount of open space and clearings available to the butterflies, which is a more ideal habitat for these butterflies to live in.[30]

Subspecies

Subspecies include:[9][12]

  • N. a. antiopa (Linnaeus, 1758)
    • The nominotypical subspecies. Type-locality: "Sweden"
  • N. a. hyperborea (Seitz, 1913) (Canada, Alaska)
    • This subspecies lays more amber-yellow eggs, instead of the olive-green. As the eggs develop, the coloration will change to lilac pinkish-purple. These larvae's spines are shorter and stouter than those of European mourning cloak larvae.[33] and the spots bordering the wing edges may be more of a violet color.
  • N. a. lintnerii (Fitch, 1857) (slightly larger than preceding; se Canada, eastern US)
  • N. a. asopos (Fruhstorfer, 1909) (Japan)

Popular culture

References

  1. ^ "Nymphalis antiopa - Mourning Cloak". explorer.natureserve.org. Retrieved 19 September 2020.
  2. ^ a b Spiny Elm Caterpillar Plant and Insect Diagnostic Clinic. Iowa State University
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Mourning Cloak". Study of Northern Virginia Ecology. Fairfax County Public Schools. Archived from the original on 4 October 2013. Retrieved 4 October 2013.
  4. ^ "Mourning Cloak Butterfly". Montana State Butterfly. State Symbols USA. Retrieved 4 October 2013.
  5. ^ a b "Butterflies of the Adirondacks: Mourning Cloak (Nymphalis antiopa)". wildadirondacks.org. Retrieved 13 March 2021.
  6. ^ Savela, Markku. "Nymphalis". Retrieved 15 November 2013.
  7. ^ Eeles, Peter. "Camberwell Beauty". Butterfly Conservation. Retrieved 15 November 2013.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Vanessa, Fonesca. "Nymphalis antiopa". Animal Diversity Web. University of Michigan Museum of Zoology. Retrieved 4 October 2013.
  9. ^ a b c Nymphalis antiopa at Markku Savela's Lepidoptera and Some Other Life Forms
  10. ^ a b Glassberg, Jeffrey (1999). Butterflies Through Binoculars: The East. Oxford University Press.
  11. ^ Latimer, Jonathan (2000). Butterflies. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. ISBN 978-0395979440. butterflies latimer.
  12. ^ a b Belicek, Joseph (12 February 2013). "Notes on the Holotype of Nymphalis antiopa hyperborea" (PDF). Retrieved 22 November 2013. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  13. ^ Hall, Donald W., and Jerry F. Butler. "Mourning Cloak - Nymphalis Antiopa (Linnaeus)." Featured Creatures. University of Florida, May 2009. Web. 14 Nov. 2013.
  14. ^ a b Davies, N., Krebs, J., & West, S. (2012). An introduction to behavioral ecology. (4th ed.). West Sussex, UK: Wiley-Blackwell.
  15. ^ a b Rutowski, Ronald (1991). "The Evolution of Male Mate-Locating Behavior in Butterflies". The American Naturalist. The University of Chicago Press. 138 (5): 1121–1139. doi:10.1086/285273. JSTOR 2462511. S2CID 85292598.
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Nymphalis antiopa: Brief Summary

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Nymphalis antiopa, known as the mourning cloak in North America and the Camberwell beauty in Britain, is a large butterfly native to Eurasia and North America.

The immature form of this species is sometimes known as the spiny elm caterpillar. Other older names for this species include grand surprise and white petticoat. A powerful flier, this species is sometimes found in areas far from its usual range during migration.

These butterflies have a lifespan of 11 to 12 months, one of the longest lifespans for any butterfly.

It is also the state insect of the U.S. state of Montana, adopted in 2001.

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