Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Family: Nymphalidae - Brushfooted Butterflies
Subfamily: Heliconiinae - Heliconians and fritillaries
Genus: Eueides
Specific name: isabella
Scientific name: Eueides isabella (Stoll, 1781)
Description: Eggs are cream coloured and approximately 1 x 0.9 mm
(h x w). Females usually place 1 to 3 eggs under older and younger
leaves of the host plant. Mature larvae have a black body with orange
and yellow stripes and white bands, with black and white scoli and head,
orange anal cap; length is around 1.7 cm. Caterpillars are gregarious
in small numbers (Brown, 1981). Pupae are greenish white with black
markings on the wingpads and short spines on dorsum that are tipped
black (DeVries, 1997).
Habits: E. isabella occurs from sea level to 1,500 m in secondary
forests. Females mate multiply, often on hilltops. Adults roost
solitarily at night under leaves (Brown, 1981).
Hostplant: E. isabella larvae feed primarily on plants from the
subgenera Distephana and Granadilla (Passifloraceae)(Brown, 1981). In
Costa Rica larvae feed on Passiflora platyloba, and P. ambigua
(Passifloraceae) (DeVries, 1997).
Distribution: Eueides isabella is widely distributed from Central
America to Brazil and also on the Greater Antilles. The map below shows
an approximate representation of the geographic distribution of this
species.