Spring is approaching but it still seems too cold for this little guy.
Observation: First butterfly of the year spotted inside the Koyuk IRA building on April 11, 2017. Spring is approaching but it still seems too cold for this little guy. I am wondering, is it a tortoiseshell butterfly?
LEO says: The butterfly appears to resemble the Milbert's Tortoiseshell Aglais milberti... This observation has been shared with the UAF Cooperative Extension Service (Forest Health).
Member Comment Derek Sykes writes: "There are two photos of butterflies. One with the word 'GOLD' above it - that butterfly is a Milbert's Tortoiseshell. The other is a Compton Tortoiseshell.
Resources:
Butterflies and Moths of North America – Range: "Southeast Alaska and Canada south in the mountains to Montana and Wyoming; east across southern Canada and the northern United States to New England; south to North Carolina and Missouri. Rare migrants to Newfoundland, Nebraska, and Florida. This species is also found in temperate Eurasia."
Butterflies of America – Nymphalis l-album j-album (Boisduval & Le Conte, [1835]). Compton Tortoiseshell Life Adults photo collection.
Wikimedia Commons – Compton Tortoiseshell (Nymphalis vaualbum), linked to a photo for insect identification comparison. Source: WCs, the free media repository
iNaturalist – "The adult female will lay her eggs in a clump on the host plant. Once the eggs hatch the caterpillars will feed together until they pupate. There is one brood that flies from July to November."