A kaleidoscope of butterflies.
A group of butterflies is called a swarm, rabble, or kaleidoscope.
A group of butterflies is called a flutter. Bees swarm, and a rabble is much too boisterous for butterflies. Butterflies are delicate creatures who gather to communicate socially only by the movement of their wings. This is called a flutter.
As far as i can tell a rabble of butterflys or a swarm of butterflys is the answer ... go figure ???
A group of butterflies is called a flutter
Groups of butterflies are called a few different things, depending on your part of the world, and whether you believe that moths are butterflies. Groups are often called a rabble, a swarm, or, like you asked, a Kaleidoscope.
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.
Butterflies belong to the arthropod group called insects. They are classified under the order Lepidoptera, which includes insects with large wings covered in scales.
They are called butterflies in Ireland too.
No. Butterflies are part of the class of insects. There are at least seven different families in the Butterflies, and several species within each of those families.
Before butterflies were called "butterflies," they were referred to as "flutterbyes." This term eventually evolved into "butterfly."
It is in the group of Lepidoptera. Or simply you can say they are insects
Insects.
The largest group of mollusks are the Gastropods which include snails, slugs, and sea butterflies The largest group of mollusks are the Gastropods which include snails, slugs, and sea butterflies
A person who catches butterflies for a living is called a lepidopterist.