Eurema nicippe

"The wing looks like a leaf that’s about to blow up into the air. That’s all I can say."

~ Bailey

Wing span: 1 3/8 - 2 1/4 inches (3.5 - 5.7 cm).

Identification: Upperside of wings orange in both sexes; orange-yellow form rare. Forewing with small black cell spot. Male with sharply defined black borders on outer and costal margins; female borders not so well-defined. In winter form, underside of hindwing is brick red, brown, or tan; in summer form it is orange-yellow. Life history: Males patrol flats and gullies for females. Females lay eggs singly under host plant leaves. Caterpillars eat leaves. Dry season form overwinters and lays eggs in spring. Flight: Four-five flights, all year long, in southern Texas and Deep South. Mid- to late summer in the north. Caterpillar hosts: Cassia species in the pea family (Fabaceae). Adult food: Nectar from many species of flowers, including shepherd's needle (Bidens pilosa). Habitat: Low elevation areas including pine flats, fields, desert scrub, gardens, vacant lots, road edges, and washes.

Range: Central America north to along the United States-Mexico border; vagrant to non-mountainous parts of the eastern U. S. south of 40 latitude; rare stray to Ontario, Connecticut, South Dakota, and Colorado.

Conservation: Not usually required.The Nature Conservancy Global Rank: G5 - Demonstrably secure globally, though it may be quite rare in parts of its range, especially at the periphery. Management needs: None reported.*

*source of information and images: Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center