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Slightly larger than the Eastern Tiger Swallowtail with a wingspan of 8.6 11.5 cm, featuring angular forewings, narrow black stripes, and tail-like projections on the hindwings
2
Known for its bright blue wings with a black edge and a wingspan of 12.7 20.32 cm, its wings reflect light, creating a glowing effect, and the dull brown underside with eyespots acts as camouflage
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A Pieridae family butterfly mostly orange in color, found on the Sulawesi and Maluku Islands of Indonesia, with related species extending from northern India to the Sunda Islands
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The second largest butterfly species with a wingspan of 28 cm, featuring bright green forewings with black bands and yellow hindwings with green dots; found only in New Guinea
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Also known as the Narrow-banded Blue Swallowtail, this African and southern Arabian butterfly has green-blue bands that vary with light and lacks the "tails" typical of swallowtails.
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Part of the Nymphalidae family, these butterflies have a wingspan of 7 12 cm and display bright red, orange, blue, and yellow colors on a black or bluish background, with patterned undersides
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Known for hibernation and metamorphosis, with orange-red wings, black veins, and white spots, males have black dots on the wings; they lay eggs only on milkweed, their caterpillars'
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Pieridae family butterfly with 4 4.5 cm wings, characterized by white uppersides with yellow, orange, or red tips on the forewings; found across Africa from Gambia to Ethiopia and south to South Africa
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Endemic to the Indonesian Islands of the Moluccas and Sulawesi, with a wingspan of 18 20 cm; males are mostly black with grey and golden spots, while larger females are dark brown