the orange albatross lives for about 13 months when they mate with another butterfly
until they die
2 months
it depends what species there are but mostly one year
It depends.
Until they turn into butterflies. And the butterflies die. t depends on how old the caterpillar is.
The red admiral butterfly lives about 10 mouths or so.
Albatrosses are _not_ limited to the Southern Hemisphere, but it is an interesting question nonetheless. Maybe it depends on what you mean by "albatross." In the albatross family, there are many species, some of which do live in the northern hemisphere. Three live in the North Pacific, and one lives in the Galapagos Islands which, being right on the equator, are technically partly in the Northern Hemisphere. There are no albatrosses in the North Atlantic. Except for the waved albatross in the Galapagos Islands, albatrosses do not live in the tropics. This is because they need wind in order to fly long distances, and there are often long periods of calm in the tropics. Therefore, those albatrosses that live in the Southern Hemisphere can not cross to the Northern Hemisphere, and vice versa. The waved albatross is able to live in the Galapagos because the local conditions there create enough wind for them. For more details, see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albatross.
12
1.5 metres long
The blue morpho butterfly is 5 to 8 inches long, one of the largest butterflies known.
Most of the butterflies life is spent in its larval stage of a caterpillar. When the adult butterfly emerges from the chrysalis, its only purpose is to mate, and lay eggs. Depending on the species, butterflies live for as little as a week or as much as a year.
butterflies dont have touge's its true