Everything about Skipper Butterfly totally explained
A
skipper is a
butterfly of the
family Hesperiidae (superfamily Hesperioidea), named after their quick, darting flight habits.
Skippers differ in several important ways from the remaining butterflies, which are classified in the superfamily
Papilionoidea and the
neotropical superfamily
Hedyloidea. Collectively, these three groups of butterflies share several characteristics especially in the egg, larval and pupal stage (Ackery et al. 1999). However, skippers have the
antennae clubs hooked backward like a
crochet hook, whilst butterflies have club-like tips to their antennae and hedylids have feathered or
pectinate antennae giving them an even more moth-like appearance than skippers. Skippers also have generally stockier bodies than the other two groups, with stronger wing muscles.
Hesperioidea is very likely the sister group of
Papilionoidea, and together with Hedyloidea constitute a natural group or
clade.
There are about 3500 species of Skippers. They are usually classified in the following subfamilies:
Note: Some authorities treat the Giant Skippers as a separate family, the
Megathymidae, but more modern classifications place them within the subfamily Hesperiinae in the family Hesperiidae.
Many species of skippers look frustratingly alike. For example, some species in the genera
Erynnis,
Hesperia, and
Amblyscirtes can't currently be distinguished in the field by experts, the only reliable method of telling them apart involving dissection and examination of the
genitalia.
Examples include:
Aaron's Skipper - Poanes aaroni
Chequered Skipper - Carterocephalus palaemon
Small Skipper - Thymelicus sylvestris
Essex Skipper - Thymelicus lineola
Lulworth Skipper - Thymelicus acteon
Silver-spotted Skipper - Hesperia comma
Large Skipper - Ochlodes venata
Dingy Skipper - Erynnis tages
Grizzled Skipper - Pyrgus malvae
Dakota Skipper - Hesperia dacotaeFurther Information
Get more info on 'Skipper Butterfly'.
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