英:['nɪmfəlɪd]
美:['nɪmfəlɪd]
英:['nɪmfəlɪd]
美:['nɪmfəlɪd]
from the stem of New Latin Nymphalidae, family name, from Nymphalis, genus name (from Latin nympha nymph + -ālis -al >entry 1) + -idae -idae Note: The introduction of the genus Nymphalis has been credited to the Polish naturalist Jan Krzysztof Kluk (1739-96) in Zwierząt domowych i dzikich, osobliwie kraiowych, historyi naturalney początki i gospodarstwo, tom 4 (Warszaw, 1780), p. 86.
The first known use of nymphalid was in 1897
1 The nymphalid butterflies use WntA one way, the monarch for a quite another.
2 In the nymphalid butterflies, the pupa is often called a 'chrysalis' on account of the golden hue displayed by the cuticle, and the term 'chrysalis' is sometimes bestowed indiscriminately on any kind of pupa.
3 The standard pattern of nymphalid butterflies, a 90-million-year-old family of some 6,000 different species, consists of four bands, parallel to the body, that run between it and the edge of the wings.
4 The means by which the suspended pupa of a nymphalid butterfly attaches its cremaster to the silken pad which the larva has spun in preparation for pupation, is worthy of brief attention.
5 A bewhiskered face, here magnified 15 times, belies the beauty of a nymphalid butterfly.
这只蛱蝶头部被放大15倍后, 脸部的毛须掩盖了它的美丽.
2 蛱蝶科
Brown emperor Arctic monarch alpine comma nymph gatekeeper buckeye pasha julia satyr ringlet dryad grayling diana fritillary morpho danaid checkerspot satyrid vanessid painted lady plain tiger red admiral angle wings tortoiseshell butterfly pearly eye Scotch argus purple emperor marbled white white admiral owl butterfly meadow brown wall brown speckled wood peacock butterfly map butterfly nettle tree butterfly snout butterfly Camberwell beauty wood nymph