Queen - Danaus gilippus thersippus==Danaus gilippus strigosus - Specimen
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LARVAE     PUPAE      MALE after ECLOSURE     FEMALE ECLOSURE


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Male Specimen
Upperside
Upperside-male
Female Specimen
Upperside
Female upperside

Male Specimen
Underside
male underside
Female Specimen
Underside
Female underside






PHOTO DETAILS - ©Nicky Davis - Jack Wolfe pinned these specimen
LOCATION: Todd Stout located females flying by  Desert Milkweed, Asclepias subulata on 14 September 2010 along the Verde River by the  town of Cottonwood, Yavapai County, Arizona
GPS: Unknown
ELEVATION: unknown

PHOTOS:
Eggs were oviposited on stems, buds, and some on the net on the side of the container.  They seemed to prefer being in the sun or partial sun to oviposit and they fed willingly on honey water.  A cottonball soaked in honey water and placed in a small plastic solo cup was offered to them two or three times a day.

Larvae hatched on the 25 and 26th of September and developed so fast that the first ones left the plant to pupate on the 7th of October and the first pupae were formed  8 October 2010.

The last instar  got off the plant to pupate and were placed in a container with a  brown paper toweling across the top and bottom and the cardboard tube from a toilet paper roll in between. They silked to the top paper toweling and pupated. Click to See Todd Stout video showing  a cardboard tube for pupating

The pupae took only ten to eleven days to develop and for the butterfly to hatch. 


LIFE HISTORY:
These  numbers are from subjects reared under 24x7 lighting and a temperature of  75- 78 degrees F.
Ovum:  Four to five Days
Larva:  Fourteen or Fifteen  Days
Pupa:   Ten to Eleven Days
Adult:   ?
Broods: ?
Hibernation:  Overwinters as  ?

Host Plant - click below for photos

Desert Milkweed - Asclepias subulata
Todd Stout's photos of Asclepias subulata
Larvae fed on Showy Milkweed - Asclepias speciosa

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