Mad Doug Biker
Banned from every bar in the Galaxy
- Location
- Craggy Island
Butterfly wings can move up to to rest with wings together above the thorax. Moths typically hold their wings like your guy. Also thick antennas and I bet he's got a chubby little body under those wings.
Sadly, Google image search failed in this case, but you have the answer above.
Both Butterflies and Moth are the same thing, it is just the way they have been classed, but they are all of the family Lepidoptera.
It always make me laugh when people try to give definitive descriptions as there are so many variations on body form (shape) for both butterfies and moths that cross-overs occur all the time (moths that look like butterflies (like, say, a Large Emerald moth) and butterflies that look like moths, like the 'Skipper' butterflies for example).
Heck, even some butterflies fly at night too!!
I don't know about the U.S., but there are 60 species of butterfly in the UK and 531 in Europe, but over 2000 (I think) species of moth in the UK, and 40,000 species of moth worldwide ranging from the tiny little micro moths, to the Macro moths and the huge Hawkmoths (most fly at night so are rarely seen). The amount of body forms is huge, there are even moths that look more like types of fly.
I have a book with all the UK species of Macro Moth and Hawkmoth in it and it is immense as it is, the smaller Micro moth species are even more numerous still.
......But butterflies and moths are all of the same huge family that is Lepidoptera!
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