because they are blue
They are called the blue morpho butterfly because the top of the wings are blue. However, the bottom of the wings are brown with spots, so when they fly, they seem to disappear and appear, giving them a morphing effect.
yes
Really, nothing at all. They have the same colors, when they are caterpillars and when they are butterflies, so, (SOME) a caterpillar can be blue and white and the butterfly (COULD) turns out blue and white.
Rare
Blue morpho's I believe are endangered so I do not believe it is possible to purchase them (at least not legally) if possible most of them will have to be shipped from Peru or other tropical locations due to the high probably of them dieing from the process I don't think it would be a good idea. Not to mention they will not live for long outside their natural enviorment.
· Ants · Butterflies · Centipedes · Dragonfly · Earthworms · Fly · Grasshopper · Honeybee · Inchworm · Japanese beetle · Kissing bug · Ladybug · Mites · No-see-ums (tiny biting flies - they are so tiny that it is hard to see them) · Octopus · Praying mantis · Roach · Scorpions · Ticks · Ulysses butterfly · Viceroy butterfly · Wasp · Xerces blue butterfly · Yellow jacket · Zebra butterfly
Because it is rare malleable and so soft!
If it's white with yellow and black stripes it will turn in to a monarch butterfly it's black and orange their mostly common in Florida also if it's In a jar or container when it comes out of it's cocoon let it out it's wings are wet from the cocoon and if you don't it will die
So basically it s butterfly in Europe from scandanavia high up in the Alps! called Vacciniina Optilete!
· ant · butterfly · crab · dragonfly · earthworm · fly · grasshopper · honeybee · inchworm · Japanese beetle · kissing bug · ladybug · mites · no-see-ums (tiny biting flies - they are so tiny that it is hard to see them) · octopus · praying mantis · roach · spider · ticks · Ulysses butterfly · Viceroy butterfly · wasp · Xerces blue butterfly · yellow jacket · Zebra butterfly
According to the WWF, Monarch butterflies are not endangered. However, their migratory patterns are at risk because their routes are endangered due to habitat loss.yes
A butterfly is an organism, so it does indeed have DNA.