Wild Facts About The Palamedes Swallowtail Butterfly
How To Identify Palamedes Swallowtail Butterflies
- Wingspan: 3.0 – 5.5 inches (7.6 – 14 cm)
- Palamedes Swallowtails are black butterflies that have:
- Above:
- Black wings, with two rows of yellow spots along the fore wing and hind wing margins.
- Yellow spots on the hind wings that merge to form a thick, continuous band.
- Below:
- A narrow yellow stripe on each hind wing that runs parallel to the abdomen, close to the wing base.
- Above:
- Adults fly during the summer months.
- Look for adult Palamedes Swallowtails in and near evergreen swamps and woodlands, especially on Pickerelweed (Pontedaria cordata).
How to Find Palamedes Swallowtail Butterflies
- Flight Season: Palamedes Swallowtail butterflies breed several times every season and fly from late March to mid-October in North Carolina.
- They live in the Atlantic coastal plain.
- Individual Palamedes Swallowtails survive North Carolina’s winters as pupae within their leathery, waterproof chrysalises.
- Some may survive mild winters as caterpillars, which is unusual for butterflies (Pyle 1981).
- Look for adult Palamedes Swallowtail butterflies near rivers, streams, and evergreen swamps (Daniels 2003) in the eastern part of North Carolina, close to the coast.
- They are especially common in and near the North Carolina’s Great Dismal Swamp.
- Palamedes Swallowtails are especially fond of nectar from Pickerelweed (Pontedaria cordata).
When A Palamedes Swallowtail Butterfly Isn’t
Similar Species
- Palamedes Swallowtail butterflies belong to a genus of swallowtail butterflies called Papilio.
- While this genus contains many different species found in various areas around the United States, several species found in the eastern United States resemble each other.
- At first glance, Palamedes Swallowtails can look a lot like:
- Black Swallowtail Butterflies (Papilio polyxenes)
- Eastern Giant Swallowtail Butterflies (Papilio cresphontes)
- The differences are subtle because all three butterflies are mostly black, have a yellow band of color on the upper side of their wings, and have long, distinct hind wing tails.
How To Tell The Palamedes Swallowtail Butterfly Apart From Other Swallowtails
Dorsal Wing Markings
- All three swallowtail butterfly species have slightly different yellow wing bands on the top surface of their wings.
- Palamedes Swallowtail butterflies have a single, wide, yellow band made up of many yellow patches smeared together into a smudged line that runs along the angle of their wings.
- Black Swallowtail butterflies have a single, wide, yellow band made up of many small, distinct spots and patches that runs along the angle of their wings.
- Eastern Giant Swallowtail butterflies have two yellow bands on their wings:
- A single, wide, yellow band made up of many small distinct spots and patches that runs along the angle of their wings,
- A second wide, yellow band that connects to the angled band at the wing points and cuts across the forewing towards the body.
Hind Wing Tails
- The hind wing tails of all three swallowtail species vary in color and pattern.
- The Palamedes Swallowtail’s hind wing tails are rimmed in black and filled with yellow.
- The Black Swallowtail’s hind wing tails are solid black.
- The Eastern Giant Swallowtail’s hind wing tails are black with a yellow, teardrop-shaped center.
Size
- All three eastern black and yellow swallowtail species vary in size, with the Black Swallowtail being the smallest, the Eastern Giant Swallowtail being the largest butterfly in the entire United States, and the Palamedes Swallowtail being in the middle.
- Black Swallowtail butterfly wing spans: Nearly 9 cm,
- Palamedes Swallowtail butterfly wing spans: Up to 14 cm,
- Eastern Giant Swallowtail butterfly wing spans: Up to 19 cm.
Range
- Palamedes Swallowtail butterflies live only in a distinct arc that starts in the eastern half of North Carolina, sweeps down the eastern half of South Carolina, covers the southern half of Georgia, Mississippi, Louisiana, extends through all of Florida, and ends in the southeastern half of Texas.
- Black Swallowtail butterflies live across the entire United States, west through the states of the Great Plains, north into Canada, and south into Mexico.
- Eastern Giant Swallowtails can live throughout the eastern United States, although their range stops short of Canada in the north, and they are less common overall in most of the United States than the Black Swallowtail (they are more common in the southern-most portions of the country and in Mexico).
Scientific Classification
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Kingdom 12840_d576c9-14> |
Animalia (animals) 12840_88ec3b-1d> |
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Phylum 12840_eada7e-1a> |
Arthropoda (arthropods) 12840_e8c3a7-f1> |
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Class 12840_84e85e-c0> |
Insecta (insects) 12840_0ec752-89> |
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Order 12840_26370c-d2> |
Lepidoptera (butterflies and moths) 12840_b1fc4a-b9> |
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Family 12840_0ecc6a-61> |
Papilionidae (swallowtail butterflies) 12840_502b61-89> |
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Genus 12840_2667a4-28> |
Papilio 12840_ee5016-5c> |
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Species 12840_0ea4c4-99> |
P. palamedes 12840_fe2869-d7> |
Scientific Name12840_ec2a1f-5b> |
Papilio palamedes 12840_c721ed-f3> |



