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seedmoney

Comma or Question Mark?

seedmoney
11 years ago

Photographed yesterday on a 'Triple Crown' Blackberry:

{{gwi:473109}}

This is my first-ever spotting of an angled butterfly--I'm so thrilled!

Comments (12)

  • MissSherry
    11 years ago

    Congratulations!

    I'm pretty sure I see the particular extra marking that question marks have that commas lack, so it would be a summer form question mark.

    I've raised nearly 20 caterpillars lately, and about 13 or 14 of them have emerged, including one that's "hanging out" in the cage on my porch right now. They're beautiful butterflies and SO easy to raise!

    Sherry

  • seedmoney
    Original Author
    11 years ago

    Sherry,
    You are an awesome butterfly sprouting machine!
    Can you elaborate on how you differentiate between these two species? And also tell me on what plant they prefer to lay their eggs?

    Regards,
    seedmoney

  • tigerdawn
    11 years ago

    I was also wondering how to attract more question marks to my yard. I see one every so often and they are gorgeous. Probably one of my favorites.

  • MissSherry
    11 years ago

    It's hard for me to describe it to you, seedmoney, especially since your QM is faded, but question marks have an extra black marking near the tip of their wings that commas don't have. The Kaufman field guide points to it in the pictures, and I imagine other butterfly field guides do also. You'd need to look at the pictures there or maybe there are some on the internet that would show the mark.

    In my area, they like hops vines and false nettles/Boehmeria cylindrica. Unfortunately, my hops vines aren't growing this year, they're still pitifully small, but the false nettles are really thriving, big and still growing. False nettles are also the principle host for red admirals here, so they do double duty, making them a great host plant! Question marks are known to also use many other members of the Urticales order in the plant family, like elms, stinging nettles, and pellitory. In many areas, they visit rotting fruit, but they've never visited mine - I just get flies! :(

    If you plant whichever of their host plants do best in your area, you'll see them from time to time. Unfortunately, they don't visit flowers like most butterflies, but you'll still see them here and there.

    Sherry

  • butterflymomok
    11 years ago

    Seedmoney,

    See the six dots that form a "v" on the wing? Above the outside wing edge on each v is a dash mark. The Comma has the six spots but no - marks.

    If I can't see the ventral wing, I use this for ID.

    Sandy

  • butterflymomok
    11 years ago

    Sorry, wish there was a delete here. That's five dots for the Comma.

    Sandy

  • larry_gene
    11 years ago

    Your Triple Crowns are coming along nicely. Mine have started to bloom also.

  • imabirdnut
    11 years ago

    I have had a ton of Question Marks this spring...more than I've ever seen before! They like my fruit feeder, my rocks I have around my fire pit, the grass, & even my larkspur flowers.
    {{gwi:473111}}
    {{gwi:473114}}
    {{gwi:473115}}
    Now that I look at these pictures I'm wondering if this last picture on the larkspur is actually a comma???

  • MissSherry
    11 years ago

    No, it's got the " - " in the right place to make it a question mark, imabirdnut.

    Those white larkspurs are gorgeous!!

    Sherry

  • butterflymomok
    11 years ago

    Kind of looks like a "brow" on that top dot!

  • imabirdnut
    11 years ago

    Thanks Sherry & Sandy...I think the commas are also a little smaller than the ?s but the picture on the larkspur wasn't clear.

    Seedmoney...I'm not sure what the ?s use here locally for a host plant but they have been in abundance since early spring...but are now missing for the most part. Maybe once the next generation ecloses...I'll see them again!

  • seedmoney
    Original Author
    11 years ago

    Thanks everybody for your helpful remarks!
    I have a bumper crop of False Nettles (Boehmeria cylindrica) that I grow for my Red Admirals, so maybe my Question Mark got word! Here's hoping he tells all his buddies... ;-)

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