|                    Atala
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                |                    Eumaeus atala
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                |                    Lycaenidae 
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                | Description: | 
               
              
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                 Small butterfly with a wingspan up to 2 inches. The abdomen is red-orange. The  upperside of the male wings is deep black with an iridescent blue or teal green overlay and markings. The female has a bright royal blue iridescent streak at the base of the forewings and iridescent blue spots at the base. The underside of the wings on both is dull black; the hindwing has a large red-orange spot and three rows of irregular iridescent ultramarine spots. The eyes are ringed with ultramarine. Caterpillars are bright red, with two rows of lemon-yellow spots on the upper side. | 
               
              
                | Range: | 
               
              
                |   | 
                 South Florida, West Indies. | 
               
              
              | Distribution and Abundance in Florida: | 
               
              
                |   | 
                 Subtropical parts of southern Florida. Short-lived introduced colonies in other areas.  Garden abundance is moderate to high.  | 
               
              
               
              | Habitat(s): | 
               
              
                |   | 
                 Hammocks, pinelands, and urban areas. | 
               
              
               
              | Reproduction: | 
               
              
                |   | 
                 Breeds year-round; most common March-April, October-December. The cream-colored eggs are laid on the upperside of leaftips in clusters of 60 or more. | 
               
              
                | Natural History: | 
               
              
                |   | 
                 Caterpillars feed in groups out in the open. The cycads on which they feed contain a toxic chemical; birds, lizards, and other animals attempt to eat the caterpillars but learn to avoid them. Adults sometimes roost in trees. They fly in a slow, moth-like flight pattern. | 
               
              Food: | 
              
              
                |   | 
                 Larval host plants include the native coontie (Zamia integrifolia) and a wide variety of introduced cycads. Nectar plants include the native shiny-leaved wild-coffee (Psychotria nervosa), blue porterweed (Stachytarpheta jamaicensis), American beautyberry (Callicarpa americana) and white indigoberry (Randia aculeata) and the weedy Spanish-needles (Bidens alba var. radiata). | 
               
                Comments: | 
              
              
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                 Once abundant in peninsular Florida, commercial harvesting of host plant and urbanization reduced Atala to a single known colony by 1965. Since then it has made a remarkable recovery. For more information, visit the Florida Museum of Natural History's Florida Wildflowers & Butterflies website, the University of Florida/IFAS Featured Creatures website, and  Butterflies and Moths of North America. See also the Florida Wildflower Foundation's  Know Your Native Pollinators page. | 
               
              Synonyms: | 
              
              
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                    Beryn Harty, 2014 Caterpillar
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