Coliadinae

Coliadinae, the sulphurs or yellows, are a subfamily of butterflies with about 300 described species.

Coliadinae
Mating dainty sulphurs (Nathalis iole)
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Order:
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Subfamily:
Coliadinae

Swainson, 1827
Tribes
  • Coliadini
  • Euremini
  • Goniopterygini

and see text

Common emigrant (Catopsilia pomona) in Keesara, Rangareddy district, Andhra Pradesh, India

There are 36 species in North America, where they range from Mexico to northern Canada. In most species, males are easily distinguished from females. For example, in the genera Colias and Gonepteryx), males exhibit brilliant UV reflections that the females lack.[1]

Systematics

The Coliadinae can be arranged in the three traditional tribes and a basal lineage, with one genus of unclear placement. The taxaincluding some selected speciesare arranged here in the presumed phylogenetic sequence, from the most ancient lineages to the most modern ones:[2]

Basal lineage

Euremini

  • Terias Swainson, 1821
  • Pyrisitia Butler, 1870
  • Abaeis Hübner, [1819]
  • Eurema Hübner, [1819] – grass yellows
  • Leucidia Doubleday, [1847]
  • Teriocolias Roeber 1909

Goniopterygini

Coliadini

Incertae sedis

Footnotes

  1. Lim & Li (2005)
  2. Brower (2006)
gollark: I know you can put your pages into categories in basically everything, but what if I want to look up a specific term or something?
gollark: Although handwritten digital notes are still annoying since they're hard to index.
gollark: Yes, paper bad.
gollark: I have about four A4-sized books of maths notes from this year and every additional one makes looking up information harder.
gollark: I mostly have paper notes for things because school, but they're annoying when I have to reference them because I generate a *lot* of notes and have to linear-search them.

References

  • Brower, Andrew V.Z. (2006): Tree of Life Web Project - Coliadinae. Version of November 16, 2006. Retrieved August 7, 2008
  • Lim, M.L.M. & Li, D. (2005): Extreme ultraviolet sexual dimorphism in jumping spiders (Araneae: Salticidae). Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 89(3): 397-406. doi:10.1111/j.1095-8312.2006.00704.x (HTML abstract)


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