Butterflies and dragonflies both have wings used for flying. However the wings of a butterfly are much larger than dragonfly wings.
Nope, they're actually not even very closely related. The monarch is a milkweed butterfly in the family Danaidae and the viceroy is an admiral in the family Nymphalidae. They mimic each other for protection. Despite the widespread belief that the nonpoisonous viceroy mimics the poisonous monarch, the fact is that both are actually distasteful, making this an example of Batesian co-mimicry. The viceroy also mimics other milkweed butterflies in some parts of its range, such as in Florida, where it mimics the queen butterfly.
They have similar wing patterns as adults, to gain the same protection from predators that recognize the pattern as a warning that the butterfly is poisonous. However, the eggs, caterpillars, and pupae of the 2 species look completely different, and they are not very closely related to one another.
The Vicroy butterfly has a black line on its lower wings, which the Monarch does not have. If you have any other butterfly questions, e-mail them to me at liviebug97@Yahoo.com. I'd love to answer them if I can!
The viceroy butterfly mimics the monarch butterfly in order to detract predators. Monarch Butterflies are poisonous and have a bad taste, so predators will see the similar viceroy butterfly and think that they are inedible.
the viceroy butterfly is a butterfly that mimics the monarch butterfly
The viceroy butterfly does benefit from eating milkweed. By consuming milkweed leaves, it accumulates toxic compounds called cardiac glycosides that make it unpalatable to predators. This protection helps the viceroy butterfly avoid being eaten.
The Viceroy butterfly is yellow-orange with black veins and white spots. It resembles the monarch butterfly but is smaller in size. The two species exhibit mimicry, with the Viceroy mimicking the appearance of the toxic monarch for protection.
The viceroy butterfly mimics the appearance of the toxic monarch butterfly to deter birds from eating it. This mimicry helps protect the viceroy by making it less palatable to predators.
The Viceroy mimics the Monarch for a special reason. The Monarch is poisonous, and so by the Viceroy acting like it's poisonous, predators avoid it. There is one difference though, the Viceroy has a black line running across his lower hind-wings. no^ the color of the viceroy is close to the monarchs and so at mating season it can affect them
The Viceroy's colors mimic those of the Monarch butterfly. They do this to protect themselves against predators. Predators know that Monarch Butterflies do not taste good, so they avoid them, and therefore will also avoid the Viceroy.
A Viceroy Butterfly mimics a Monarch Butterfly by having a similar appearance, with orange and black wings. This mimicry helps protect the Viceroy from predators, as the Monarch is toxic to eat, so predators learn to avoid both species. However, the Viceroy has an extra black line across its hindwings, helping to distinguish it from the Monarch.
A butterfly with a name starting with the letter v is the Viceroy butterfly. It resembles the Monarch butterfly but i has a black line that crosses its wings.
The Viceroy is a poisonous butterfly, just like the Monarch. The confusion about the Viceroy toxicity comes from 19th century ideas about mimicry. Unfortunately, entymologists failed to test the theory until 1991. Even today many text books erroneously discuss the Viceroy as non-toxic. The Monarch was early identified as poisonous and entymologists immediately assumed the Viceroy was not. However, after testing, the Viceroy Butterfly is at least at toxic as the Monarch. The question is - which is the immitation? The Viceroy Butterfly is almost indistinguishable from the Monarch Butterfly.
The adaptation of the monarch butterfly is a early diet of milkweed. This diet of milkweed ensures the caterpillars and the adults taste terrible. A predator has only to taste the bitter monarch once to learn to avoid them in the future.
The viceroy butterfly has evolved to mimic the appearance of the monarch butterfly as a form of protection from predators. While the viceroy's adaptations are effective in providing some level of defense, they are not as potent as the monarch's adaptations. The monarch butterfly's toxicity from consuming milkweed as a caterpillar provides a higher level of protection compared to the viceroy's mimicry strategy.
Yes, there is a butterfly called the viceroy that mimics the appearance of the monarch butterfly to gain protection from predators. Despite not being closely related to monarchs, viceroys have evolved to look very similar in order to share in the monarch's distastefulness to predators.