Also known as monarch, milkweed, common tiger, wanderer, black veined brown, monarch butterfly
milkweed butterfly in the family Nymphalidae
Danaus plexippus, commonly known as the monarch butterfly, is a milkweed butterfly belonging to the family Nymphalidae. It matters because of its remarkable long-distance migration patterns and its dependence on milkweed plants, making it an important indicator of environmental health and a subject of widespread scientific study and conservation efforts.
AI-generated from the Wikipedia summary — may contain errors.
Danaus plexippus
SPECIES
君主斑蝶(学名:Danaus plexippus),又名黑脉金斑蝶,大樺斑蝶,是一種斑蝶。牠們可能是北美洲最廣為人知的蝴蝶。自19世紀,牠們就在新西蘭被發現,並於1871年在澳洲發現。牠們分佈在歐洲的加那利群島及馬德拉,並有一些遷徙至俄羅斯、亞速爾群島、瑞典及西班牙。翅膀上有顯眼的橙色及黑色斑紋,翅膀闊8.9-10.2厘米。雌蝶的翅脈更為深色,雄蝶的後翅中央有一斑點可以釋放信息素。雄蝶較雌蝶為大。
via GBIF · IUCN
Male D. p. plexippus on Tithonia flower D. p. plexippusPiedra Herrada, Mexico The monarch butterfly or simply monarch (Danaus plexippus) is a milkweed butterfly (subfamily Danainae) in the family Nymphalidae. Other common names, depending on region, include milkweed, common tiger, wanderer, and black-veined brown. It is among the most familiar of North American butterflies and an iconic pollinator, although it is not an especially effective pollinator of milkweeds. Its wings feature an easily recognizable black, orange, and white pattern, with a wingspan of 8.9–10.2 cm (3.5–4.0 in). A Müllerian mimic, the viceroy butterfly, is similar in color and pattern, but is markedly smaller and has an extra black stripe across each hindwing.
The eastern North American monarch population is notable for its annual southward late-summer/autumn instinctive migration from the northern and central United States and southern Canada to Florida and Mexico. During the fall migration, monarchs cover thousands of miles, with a corresponding multigenerational return north in spring. The western North American population of monarchs west of the Rocky Mountains often migrates to sites in southern California, but have been found in overwintering Mexican sites, as well. Populations are found further south in the Americas, and in parts of Europe, Oceania, and Southeast Asia.
via Wikidata · CC0
via Wikidata sitelinks · CC0
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).