Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Family: Nymphalidae
Genus: Vanessa
Species: Vanessa cardui
The Painted Lady is a medium-sized butterfly with a wingspan of roughly 5–9 cm (2–3.5 inches). Upper wings are orange-brown with black margins and white spotting on the forewings. The hindwings show distinctive eye spots on the underside.
Forewings:
Hindwings:
These eye spots function as predator distraction markers.
Highly active. Frequently observed nectaring on composite flowers such as coneflower, thistle, cosmos, and zinnia. Fast, erratic flight when disturbed.
One of the most widespread butterflies in the world.
This species is migratory. In North America, populations move northward in spring and summer and return southward in fall. Unlike Monarchs, migration is multi-generational and less synchronized.
Thrives in disturbed landscapes, which makes it a reliable indicator of flowering plant abundance.
Primarily feeds on:
Larvae build silk shelters on host plants.
Complete metamorphosis:
Multiple generations per year depending on climate.
Because it uses many host plants, it is resilient compared to specialist species.
However, unlike Monarchs, Painted Ladies are not currently considered threatened globally.
The Painted Lady is sometimes called the “global citizen” of butterflies due to its nearly worldwide distribution.
Outbreak years can produce massive population surges when conditions align — particularly after wet winters that increase host plant growth.
This species thrives in gardens that allow flowering weeds or native composites to persist.
To attract and support:
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