A stunning butterfly from western Africa, the flame-bordered charaxes (Charaxes protoclea) is well-named: it definitely looks aflame in bright sunlight! Seen from above, the lower central portions of the female’s wings are white-hot; the wingtips display a range of yellow-to-orange spots, and a strip of brilliant orange frames each wing. (The males’ wings are a muted brownish-black, but also bordered in fiery orange.)
From below, charaxes are much more toned down, colored in muted browns and grays with a single dark eye spot. Male butterflies are a subtle maroon-brown in color, while females are light tan, with a single wide, white stripe midwing. The different coloring on the wing patterns of each sex is known as sexual dimorphism, and is fairly common in butterflies (see our mocker swallowtail post for another kind of dimorphism).
Preview all the butterflies currently being exhibited at chicagobotanic.org/butterflies/species.
©2013 Chicago Botanic Garden and my.chicagobotanic.org
Hey Courtney:
I was at a photo shoot of the butterflies on Wednesday morning. It was super. I was wondering if you could help me with some identification. I would be grateful if you could email me – I do not have your email address.
Thx.
Jeff
Hey Jeff!
Hope you got my personal reply to your comment. I’d be happy to help with ID. Just send me your images and I will gladly identify them for you.
Jeff, did you see there is a webpage for the exhibition’s butterflies? Maybe you can match your images there. Check out http://www.chicagobotanic.org/butterflies/species