Share |
You are here: Home Fish and Wildlife Native Fish and Wildlife Profiles Leona's Little Blue Butterfly
Document Actions

Leona's Little Blue Butterfly

Learn more about Leona's little blue and find out why it needs our help!

Scientific Name:
Philotiella leona
 Size: Wingspan of ¾”-1”
 Habitat: Open, ashy scrubland with abundant buckwheat
 Status: Not listed                                                           

 

Leona's little blueAbout

Discovered in 1991, Leona’s little blue is a tiny butterfly that is native only to Klamath County, Oregon. The geographic range of this threatened butterfly is only a 6 square mile area, and it depends upon clearings in lodgepole pine forests for its habitat. The buckwheat that grows in the ash and volcanic pumice filled soil of these clearings is crucial for these butterflies, both as the host plant of the larvae and to provide nectar for the adults. Adult males of this species have bluish wings with black spots, and females are brownish-black.

 

Why does it need our help?

Learn more about the action being taken to protect Leona's little blue butterfly, as well as the work Oregon Wild does to protect the forests and wilderness that species such as Leona's butterfly depend on!

Because the population of Leona’s little blue is so small, with only 1,000-2,000 individuals, and because its habitat needs are so specific, the species is in great danger of going extinct. Specific threats to Philotiella leona include encroachment of pines into the open clearings they live in, logging, irresponsible fire control practices, and insecticide and herbicide use. Unfortunately, most of this butterfly’s habitat rests on private timberland, and a possible change in land ownership could further endanger it, and perhaps even drive it to extinction. The success of a petition, headed in part by Oregon Wild, requesting that Leona’s little blue butterfly be listed as endangered under the U.S. Endangered Species Act is necessary not only for the survival of this minute butterfly, but also the protection of the ecosystem it calls home.

  

Did you know?

  • Butterflies have taste sensors on their feet, and taste things by standing on them.
  • By the time caterpillars are ready to metamorphose, they are about 25,000 times larger than when they first emerged from their egg. If humans grew at the same rate, a 9 pound baby would weigh more than 200,000 pounds when it was done growing!

 

 

 

 

 

Photo courtesy of Butterflies and Moths of North America, photo by Gary Pearson

Sources: http://www.butterfliesandmoths.org, http://www.xerces.org and http://www.butterfliesofamerica.com

 

Act Now!

bats

Act Now to support Oregon's Wildlife.

Do you know...
How successful has the Endangered Species Act been in preventing the extinction of fish and wildlife?
 26%
 99%
 63%
 

powered by Plone | site by Groundwire