Richmond Birdwing Butterfly Wildlife Queensland The Courier Mail

Richmond Birdwing Butterfly Smithsonian Photo Contest Smithsonian Magazine


The Richmond birdwing butterfly ( Ornithoptera richmondia) is the largest subtropical Australian butterfly, found only in subtropical northern New South Wales and Southeast Queensland. Its populations have declined in Queensland since the 1920s following the loss and fragmentation of their habitats, mainly rainforests.

Richmond Birdwing Butterfly Wildlife Queensland Quest News


With an adult wingspan of up to 16cm the Richmond Birdwing Butterfly ( Ornithoptera richmondia) is one of Australia's largest butterflies. The females have a mix of dark brown or black, white, cream and yellow markings while the males have distinctive iridescent green or blue markings.

RICHMOND BIRDWING BUTTERFLY ANiMOZ Fight for Survival


Richmond birdwing butterfly This vine is the main food species for the Richmond birdwing butterfly. [8] This plant has suffered from habitat loss since the appearance of European settlers. Former areas of its habitat have been almost completely destroyed, such as at the Big Scrub.

Nature & Travel Photography Richmond Birdwing Butterfly On Leaf


The Richmond birdwing butterfly ( Ornithoptera richmondia) is the largest subtropical Australian butterfly, found only in subtropical northern New South Wales and South East Queensland. Richmond birdwing butterfly populations have declined in Queensland since the 1920s following the loss and fragmentation of their habitats, mainly rainforests.

Female Richmond Birdwing Butterfly, Mt Tamborine Animals, Mt tamborine, Butterfly


In the early 1900s, the Richmond birdwing (at that time referred to widely as 'the Trojan' in northern New South Wales, and more formally considered generally to be a variety of ' Troides priamus', for example, by Rainbow 1907) was known to have had a patchy distribution from near Grafton and the Clarence River, New South Wales, to Maryborough,.

Richmond Birdwing Butterfly, Tamborine Rainforest Skywalk, Queensland Australia Butterfly


The Richmond Birdwing Conservation Network is devoted to the conservation of this beautiful butterfly and the host vines and habitat that it requires for survival. Find out about the two vines that the larva of the Richmond Birdwing feeds on and the flowers that attract the adult butterflies. Here you will find a guide on how to plant and.

Richmond Birdwing Butterfly Ornithoptera richmondia Male Flickr


The Richmond birdwing butterfly, the largest subtropical butterfly in Australia, is closely related to several other birdwings from northern Queensland and New Guinea. It is protected in Queensland, where it is classified as a threatened species at risk of extinction.

Brisbane's Big Butterfly Count A threatened species The Richmond Birdwing butterfly


(insects) Family Papilionidae (swallowtails) Scientific name Ornithoptera richmondia (Gray, [1853]) Common name Richmond birdwing WildNet taxon ID 2014 Synonym (s) Troides richmondia Alternate name (s) Richmond birdwing butterfly Nature Conservation Act 1992 (NCA) status Vulnerable Conservation significant Yes Endemicity

Some Richmond Birdwing lifecycle stages


Summary The Richmond Birdwing Butterfly, restricted to subtropical areas of Australia, is threatened with extinction in the Queensland part of its range because of clearing and fragmenting rainforests containing its larval food vines. Habitat fragmentation and drought have exacerbated risks of inbreeding depression and a range of other threats exist, including invasions of the exotic Dutchmans.

Richmond Birdwing (Ornithoptera richmondia) Male Under


The Richmond River Birdwing Butterfly was a reasonably common species when the Big Scrub rainforest once covered this region; its range extended from Grafton to the subtropical rainforest around Noosa in Queensland. This range has been severely modified due to extensive habitat destruction for timber, dairy farming, habitation pressures and.

23 Especially Stunning Rare Butterflies


The vulnerable Richmond birdwing (Ornithoptera richmondia) is one of the largest and showiest subtropical butterflies in Australia. The two other birdwing butterflies found in Australia, Ornithoptera priamus and Ornithoptera euphorion are typically larger. Protected in Queensland, it is ranked as a critical priority for conservation action by the Department of Environment and Heritage.

Richmond Birdwing Butterfly Wildlife Queensland The Courier Mail


The spectacular Richmond birdwing butterfly (Ornithoptera richmondia) is the largest butterfly in South East Queensland and Northern New South Wales. The colourful male has a wingspan of 12-13cm, with a black body, brilliant green stripes and spots on both sides of its wings, green patches on its hind wings and a bright red splash on its thorax.

The Richmond Birdwing Butterfly ECOEducation Service


The Richmond Birdwing Butterfly Ornithoptera richmondia.: The Richmond Birdwing Butterfly (Ornithoptera richmondia) is one of the largest butterflies found in South East Queensland and Northern New South Wales. This beautiful butterfly, the male of which has brilliant green and black wings and bright red splash on its thorax, was once found in great numbers from the Mary River Heads in.

Richmond birdwing butterfly at Melbourne Zoo r/melbourne


Ornithoptera richmondia, the Richmond birdwing, is a species of birdwing butterfly that is endemic to Australia. It is the second smallest of the birdwing species, the smallest being Ornithoptera meridionalis . Distribution Historically, O. richmondia is recorded from rainforests southwards from Maryborough to the Clarence River in New South Wales.

Big Scrub. Richmond Birdwing Butterfly Big Scrub Rainforest Conservancy


4.2.1 Flowers as Nectar Sources for Adult Birdwings. The Richmond birdwing will search for flowers of many rainforest trees close to the breeding sites, or travel considerable distances into more open or dryer areas to obtain nectar from woodland species or even exotic plants, for example lantana.

Richmond Birdwing SBBT


Ornithoptera richmondia, the Richmond birdwing, is a species of birdwing butterfly that is endemic to Australia. It is the second smallest of the birdwing species, the smallest being Ornithoptera meridionalis. Contents Distribution Abundance and conservation status Biology Host plants and larval biology Adult biology Distribution