Butterflies
get their name from the yellow brimstone butterfly of
Europe that is first seen in the early spring or "butter"
season.

Female Queen Alexandra butterflies,
from Papua and New Guinea, are the largest in the world,
some with wingspans larger than 26 cm.

Butterflies and moths are found
on all land masses except Antarctica.

The atlas moth, one of the
largest silk moths, can be mistaken for a medium-sized
bat when flying.

There are over 2,000 species
of butterflies in the rainforests of South America.

Butterflies belong to, alongside
with moths to an order called Lepidoptera.

The fastest flying butterfly
is the Monarch, which has been clocked with a speed as
high as 17 miles per hour.

Butterflies are further divided
into 30 orders, the main basis of classification being
their wing structure.

The main features of butterflies
have in common are:
6 legs
one pair of antennae
a segmented body in which three body parts, a head, a
thorax and an abdomen can be distinguished.

Night butterflies have ears
on their wings so they can avoid bats.

A butterfly's taste sensors
are located below their feet.

The color in a butterfly's
wings does not come from pigment. The color is produced
prism-like by light reflected by their transparent wing
scales.

The largest butterfly is the
Queen Alexandra's birdwing butterfly from Papua New Guinea.
The wingspan of the butterfly can reach to be almost one
foot.

A butterfly has to have a body
temperature greater than 86 degrees to be able to fly.

A butterfly can see the colors
red, green, and yellow.

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