Limenitis lorquini powelli
Photo Life History: JCMDI
Habitat: Mountain Canyons; Valley Lakes & Rivers
Host Plants: Salix lasiandra; Salix lasiolepis; Salix exigua
Suitable Lab Host Plants: Any convenient willows, cottonwoods, or aspens.
How to Find Female Butterflies: Click here. (L. lorquini females can be found in the same habitat as the males; but can be spotty. If you spend enough time roaming the habitat (sometimes it takes a few hours), you can spot a female nectaring, or patrolling down a canyon.)
How to Care for Live Female Butterflies: Nectaring techniques
Methods of Female Oviposition: Open Screen Cages; High Humidity Cages; expose caged females to filtered sunlight. Potted Plant Sleeves. (Misting spraying sleeves with water a few times can affect females to lay more eggs.)
How to Find Eggs: Look on tips of leaves
How to Hatch Eggs: Keep egg on original leaf. Keep humid!
How to Find Caterpillars in the Field: Look on isolated host plants; focusing on young instar perches on tips of leaves. Also, larval hibernacula can be visually conspicuous.
Caterpillar setups: Semi-closed terrariums; Potted Plant
Larva to Pupa: Caterpillar silks to leaf or twig; creates and attaches cremaster; hanging as a J before pupating.
How to Find Pupae in the Field:
Number of Broods per Year: 1-3; depending upon location.
Overwintering Stage: Third instar in hibernaculum
Overwintering Strategies: Wine Cooler; Pinning Hibernacula to host
Post-Hibernation Strategies: Well documented with this link-->Post-diapause Limenitis third instar caterpillars.
Avoiding Diapause Techniques: Expose second instar larvae to 24 hours of light! This is not as critical for multivoltine populations of ssp. powelli that fly in the LA Basin.
Disease Prevention: Change out host plant and remove frass every five days.
Emergence: Emergence Container
Field Notes: Most Limenitis that are reared with a 24 hour photoperiod will not diapause. Freshly molted 2nd instars are especially sensitive to monitoring photoperiod. First instars do not. In habitats where the hosts are scattered or confined, ova and small larvae can be collected. During the late fall or winter, when most of the leaves have fallen, it is not too difficult to spot hibernacula. As is true with other Limenitis species, females oviposit well in a cage with high humidity and/or exposed to filtered sunlight. In the Eastern U.S., once you understand the principles of raising viceroys, it will not be difficult for you to rear red spotted purples and vice versa. If you live in the Western U.S., once you've mastered how to rear lorquin's admirals, it won't be difficult for you to rear other Limenitis, etc.