Viceroy

Limenitis archippus

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Photo of a Viceroy resting with wings open
Viceroys can be separated from monarchs by the line crossing the black hindwing veins and a single row of white spots in the black wing margins.
Donna Brunet
Family

Nymphalidae (brushfooted butterflies)

Description

Like the similar-looking monarch butterfly, the viceroy is fairly large, with orange with black veining and black margins with light spots. Viceroys can be separated from monarchs by the line crossing the black hindwing veins and a single row of white spots in the black wing margins.

Viceroy caterpillars resemble bird droppings and are similar to those of the red-spotted purple — humped at the thorax, covered with tubercles, with one longer pair on the thorax, and mottled in shades of brown, brownish yellow, white, and green.

Size

Wingspan: 2¼–3 inches.

Viceroy_Marias_Temps_Clair

Viceroy butterfly perched on a leafy green plant.
Viceroy
Viceroys occur mostly in wet habitats, but they are also found in other locations, including gardens.

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Viceroy perched on a twig tip, viewed from below
Viceroy
Viceroys and monarchs look very similar. Both use the same warning coloration to warn would-be predators: We are toxic!
Habitat and conservation

Occurs mostly in wet habitats, but also found in other locations, including gardens. Once considered the classic case of a Batesian mimic — an edible species resembling an inedible one (in this case, the monarch) to avoid predation — the viceroy is now recognized as inedible itself. When more than one toxic species use the same coloration to “communicate” a warning to their predators, it’s called Müllerian mimicry.

Foods

Caterpillars feed at night on willow catkins, switching to leaves after flowering. Other trees such as poplar and wild cherry are also used. The adults visit flowers as well as rotting fruit, tree sap, honeydew (the sugary excretions of sap-eating aphids), animals droppings, and mud puddles.

image of Viceroy Distribution Map
Distribution in Missouri

Statewide.

Status

Breeding resident.

Life cycle

Adults fly from May to October. Females lay eggs, a few at a time, on the leaf tips of host plants. In late fall, the partially grown caterpillars retreat within a rolled leaf tip, and they overwinter in this shelter.

Human connections

One of the most fascinating branches of biology is the study of animal behavior. The feeding behavior of birds is intertwined with the development of toxicity and warning colors (and sometimes behaviors) of their prey species. Biologists continue to study viceroys, monarchs, and their predators.

Ecosystem connections

Because of their warning coloration, most viceroys are ignored by predators: A young blue jay, for example, only needs to eat one viceroy or monarch, and vomit, before learning to avoid both of them. Thus the coloration benefits both butterfly species as well as their "educated" predators.