Coliadinae

Coliadinae
Coliadinae
Mating Dainty Sulfurs (Nathalis iole)
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Family: Pieridae
Subfamily: Coliadinae
Swainson, 1827
Tribes

Coliadini
Euremini
Goniopterygini
and see text

Coliadinae, the sulfurs, sulphurs, or yellows, are a subfamily of butterflies with about 300 described species.

There are 36 species in North America, where they range from Mexico to northern Canada. Males of most species are different from females, including, (for example, in the genera Colias and Gonepteryx) brilliant UV reflections which the females lack.[1]

Systematics

The Coliadinae can be arranged in the 3 traditional tribes and a basal lineage, with one genus of unclear placement. The taxa—including some selected species—are arranged here in the presumed phylogenetic sequence, from the most ancient lineages to the most modern ones:[2]

Basal lineage

  • Kricogonia Reakirt, 1863
  • Nathalis Boisduval, [1836]

Euremini

  • Terias Swainson, 1821
  • Pyrisitia Butler, 1870
  • Abaeis Hübner, [1819]
  • Eurema Hübner, [1819] – grass yellows
  • Leucidia Doubleday, [1847]
  • Teriocolias Roeber 1909

Goniopterygini

Coliadini

  • Catopsilia Hübner, [1819] – emigrants
  • Colias Fabricius, 1807 – clouded yellows
  • Zerene Hübner, [1819]
  • Anteos Hübner, [1819] – angled-sulphurs
  • Aphrissa Butler, 1873
  • Phoebis Hübner, [1819]
    • Phoebis sennae – Cloudless Sulphur
    • Phoebis avellaneda – Red-splashed Sulphur
  • Prestonia Schaus, 1920
    • Prestonia clarki Schaus, 1920
  • Rhabdodryas Godman & Salvin, [1889]
    • Rhabdodryas trite (Linnaeus, 1758)

Incertae sedis

  • Gandaca Moore, [1906]

Footnotes

  1. ^ Lim & Li (2005)
  2. ^ Brower (2006)

References