Leptophobia eleusis

Leptophobia eleusis, the Eleusis white, is a butterfly in the family Pieridae. The species was first described by Hippolyte Lucas in 1852. It is found from Venezuela to Bolivia.[1]

Leptophobia eleusis
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Family: Pieridae
Genus: Leptophobia
Species:
L. eleusis
Binomial name
Leptophobia eleusis
(H. Lucas, 1852)[1]
Synonyms
  • Pieris eleusis H. Lucas, 1852
  • Pieris suadella C. Felder & R. Felder, 1861
  • Pieris cinnia falledra Fruhstorfer, 1908
  • Pieris eleusis Doubleday, 1847 (nom. nud.)

The wingspan is 42–48 mm (1.7–1.9 in).[2]

The larvae feed on Brassica species.[3]

Subspecies

The following subspecies are recognised:[1]

  • Leptophobia eleusis eleusis (Colombia, Venezuela)
  • Leptophobia eleusis mollitica Fruhstorfer, 1908 (Peru, Ecuador)
gollark: Everyone knows that bad things are permitted to exist for a maximum of a year.
gollark: Also also, computer systems are fairly close to human performance on some tasks (I think image recognition and processing, and nowadays some text generation), and do much better on some others (chess, go, etc.).
gollark: Also, human brains are basically just special... biological things, with a bunch more processing power (in some ways) than current computers.
gollark: You said it "is not", but computers actually *do* exist as far as I can tell, though.
gollark: Prove it. Also define "thinks".

References

  1. Savela, Markku (March 20, 2019). "Leptophobia eleusis (Lucas, 1852)". Lepidoptera and Some Other Life Forms. Retrieved July 22, 2020.
  2. Parque Nacional Sangay (Ecuador)
  3. caterpillars.unr.edu


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