Those who study or collect butterflies and/or moths are called lepidopterists. The word comes from the taxonomic order to which butterflies and moths belong: Lepidoptera.
I don't think so, butterflies are insect which means they have an exoskeleton, and exoskeleton doesn't have pores.
Moths are very similar to butterflies. The group of insects that butterflies and moths belong to is the Lepidoptera. A group of only moths are called a wainscot.
There are 128 butterflies in total at the butterfly park. This is calculated based on the ratio of 8:4 for North American butterflies, which means for every 8 North American butterflies, there are 4 South American butterflies. Given there are 64 North American butterflies, the total number is doubled to include South American butterflies in a 1:2 ratio to European butterflies.
As far as i can tell a rabble of butterflys or a swarm of butterflys is the answer ... go figure ???
Butterflies can vary in size depending on the species. Some butterflies can be as small as a fingernail while others can have a wingspan of up to 12 inches.
"Collect" can be a verb, as in, "She wanted to collect butterflies". Or, "Collect" can be an adjective, as in, "I just made a collect phone call".
People collect butterfly wings so they can study it and see the butterflies habitats and adaptations. The people who study butterflies are called lepidopterists.
That would be an Entomologist. The study of insects, entomology.
Butterflies!
they call it ocean graphers
Pollen for bees and butterflies?
Tax collector
I don't think so, butterflies are insect which means they have an exoskeleton, and exoskeleton doesn't have pores.
it gives you 20 percent discount
horder
No, collect is a verb (to collect) and an adjective (a collect call).
collect call