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Papilionoidea

 
Sci-Tech Dictionary: Papilionoidea
(pə′pil·ē·ə′nöid·ē·ə)

(invertebrate zoology) A superfamily of diurnal butterflies (Lepidoptera) with clubbed antennae, which are rounded at the tip, and forewings that always have two or more veins.


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Wikipedia: Papilionoidea
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Papilionoidea
Papilio demodocus
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Suborder: Ditrysia
(unranked): Rhopalocera
Superfamily: Papilionoidea
Latreille, 1802
Families

The superfamily Papilionoidea (from the genus Papilio, meaning "butterfly") contains all the butterflies except for the skippers, which are classified in superfamily Hesperioidea, and the moth-like Hedyloidea.

A proposed phylogenetic position of the Papilionoidea is as follows:[1]

Rhopalocera

Papilionoidea (true butterflies)



Hesperiidae (skippers)



Hedylidae (American butterfly moths)



Some authors treat this group as a series Papilioniformes within a single superfamily that also includes the skippers. However not all authors agree that all the butterflies constitute a single clade. The skippers are significantly different from the other butterflies. The members of the Papilionoidea may be distinguished by the following combination of characters:

  • the body is smaller and less moth-like.
  • the wings are larger.
  • the antennae are straight and clubbed (rather than hooked as in the skippers).
  • the caterpillars do not spin cocoons to pupate in.
  • the pupae are angular rather than rounded.

Families of Papilionoidea

The five well-supported families of Papilionoidea are:

Of the subfamilies of Nymphalidae, only the Morphinae and Satyrinae are possibly paraphyletic, but these two subfamilies form a strongly-supported clade with the Charaxinae as sister-group.[2]

References

  1. ^ Tree of Life Accessed January 2007
  2. ^ Gerardo Lamas (2008) Systematics of butterflies (Lepidoptera: Hesperioidea and Papilionoidea) in the world: current state and future perspectives (in Spanish). In: Jorge Llorente-Bousquets and Analía Lanteri (eds.) Contribuiciones taxonómicas en ordens de insectos hiperdiversos. Mexico City: UNAM. Pp. 57-70.

 
 
Learn More
Lycaenidae (invertebrate zoology)
Papilionidae (invertebrate zoology)
Nymphalidae (invertebrate zoology)

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