common name: spicebush swallowtail
scientific name: Papilio troilus Linnaeus (Insecta: Lepidoptera: Papilionidae)
The spicebush swallowtail butterfly is a large, dark swallowtail. It is one of our most beautiful
and interesting swallowtails. All developmental stages are great examples of adaptive coloration.
The spicebush swallowtail is found throughout the eastern half of the United States from
southern Canada south to southern Florida except the Miami area and Keys and west to Texas. It
is less common farther west from the Mississippi River. Two subspecies are recognized: Papilio
troilus troilus, which is distributed throughout the range, and Papilio troilus ilioneus, which is
restricted to the southern coastal plain including the Florida peninsula.
The wingspread range is 4.1 to 5.6 cm. The upper surface of the fore wings is black with a
narrow marginal row and a broader submarginal row of light yellow row spots. The upper
surfaces of the hind wings also have the rows of spots, but they are light green in color. The
median areas of the hind wings are dusted with blue in females and blue-green to green in males.
adult female
adult male
Eggs are greenish-white. Young larvae are bird-dropping mimics. Last instar larvae are green
with a pale yellow lateral line edged beneath with a fine black line. The underside of the larva is
pinkish-brown. Abdominal segments have a transverse band of six blue dots with each dot ringed
by a fine black line (much thicker than those on larvae of the palamedes swallowtail, Papilio palamedes). One dot on each side is beneath the lateral line. There is a pair of large tan false eyespots lined with black on the rear of the thorax. The eyespots have a large black center with a white "false reflection". Larvae also have a smaller pair of tan spots at the front of the abdomen. Pupae have two anterior "horns" and may be brown or green.
egg
young larva
mature larva
green pupa
brown pupa
There are many flights in Florida with peaks in late spring and early fall in central Florida. The
host plants are species of Lauraceae. The most commonly used hosts are sassafras, Sassafras
albidum (Nutt.) Nees; spicebush, Lindera benzoin (L.) Blume; camphortree, Cinnamomum
camphora (L.) J. Presl, and red bay, Persea borbonia (L.) Spreng. In the experience of the
authors, red bay is not used as frequently as the other species. The foliage of all of these plants is
pleasingly aromatic when crushed -- a characteristic that aids in differentiating them from similar
plants in other families.
sassafras
spicebush
camphortree
red bay
Eggs are laid singly on the undersides of leaves of the host plants. Young trees are usually
selected and eggs are typically laid from two to five meters above the ground. First instar larvae
bend a leaf edge over and silk it down to make a leaf next. Older larvae spin a silk mat on a leaf
that contracts to curl the two lateral leaf edges upward and together to form a leaf nest. Larvae
usually hide in the leaf nest during the daytime and to molt when birds and other predators are
unlikely to see them. They come out to feed at night. Young larvae are bird-dropping mimics,
and mature larvae with their swollen thorax and eyespots are believed to mimic either green
snakes or tree frogs. Larvae pupate on slender stems among vegetation, and pupae of the late
summer or fall generation hibernate. Pupae may be either green or brown during the summer, but
over-wintering pupae are brown. Both are leaf mimics. Adults are believed to be Batesian
(palatable) mimics of the poisonous blue swallowtail.
- Daniels JC. 2000. Butterflies 2: Butterflies of the Southeast. UF/IFAS. Card Set. SP 274.
- Gerberg EJ, Arnett RH. 1989. Florida Butterflies. National Science Publications, Inc.
Baltimore, MD.
-
Hagen RH, Scriber JM. 1991. Systematics of the Papilio glaucus and P. troilus species
groups (Lepidoptera: Papilionidae): inferences from allozymes. Annals of the Entomological
Society of America 84: 380-395.
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Lederhouse RC, Ayres MP, Nitao JK, Scriber JM. 1992. Differential use of lauraceous
hosts by swallowtail butterflies, Papilio troilus and P. palamedes (Papilionidae). OIKOS 63:
244-252.
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Nitao JK, Ayres MP, Lederhouse RC, Scriber JM. 1991. Larval adaptation to lauraceous
hosts: geographic divergence in the spicebush swallowtail butterfly. Ecology 72: 1428-1435.
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Opler PA, Krizek GO. 1984. Butterflies East of the Great Plains. The Johns Hopkins
University Press. Baltimore, MD.
-
Opler PA, Malikul V. 1998. A Field Guide to Eastern Butterflies. Peterson Field Guides.
Houghton Mifflin Company. New York.
-
Scott JA. 1986. The Butterflies of North America. Stanford University Press. Stanford, CA.
-
West DA, Hazel WN. 1996. Natural pupation sites of three North American swallowtail
butterflies: Eurytides marcellus (Cramer), Papilio cresphontes Cramer, and P. troilus L.
(Papilionidae). Journal of the Lepidopterists' Society 50: 297-312.
Authors: Donald W. Hall and Jerry F. Butler, University of Florida
Photographs: Jerry F. Butler and Donald W. Hall, University of Florida
Project Coordinator: Thomas R. Fasulo, University of Florida
Publication Number: EENY-168
Publication Date: October 2000. Latest revision: August 2007.
Copyright 2000-2007 University of Florida
Featured Creatures
Department of Entomology and Nematology
Division of Plant Industry
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