Cypris morpho | |
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Plate fromAdalbert Seitz showing a male and female. | |
Scientific classification![]() | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Class: | Insecta |
Order: | Lepidoptera |
Family: | Nymphalidae |
Genus: | Morpho |
Species: | M. cypris |
Binomial name | |
Morpho cypris (Westwood, 1851) |
Morpho cypris, theCypris morpho, is aNeotropical butterfly. It is found inPanama,Costa Rica,Nicaragua,Colombia,Venezuela,Trinidad and Tobago andEcuador. Severalsubspecies and many forms have been described.
Morpho cypris replacesM. rhetenor in Colombia and Central America and one might strictly speaking unite it with the latter as a geographical branch unless the anatomy shows essential differences,M. cypris is here, however, kept separate on account of the rounded shape of the forewing and the somewhat more vertically placed white median band of the upper surface,M. cypris andM. helena outshine even the other Morphids in their incomparable gloss andM. cypris in particular is a true gem, unequalled in its brilliance throughout the whole of nature (Schatz). According to the fall of the light the blue of this incomparable insect shows a more violet or more greenish gloss and the delicate white band a yellowish tone or more of a tinge of rose colour. The blue is of such ethereal purity and such intensive lustre that all the other colours appear faded or dull in comparison. Only the Malayo-AustralianOrnithoptera can outrival the Morphids, adding as they do to the brilliance of their golden green colouring the further charm of a quite distinguished form and wing contour. The scaling itself, as inM. rhetenor, remains fixed, but the interference scales are wanting in the normal females so that these are of the primitive yellowish ochreous (brassolid) ground colour common to all the species of theM. adonis group.[1]
Cypris is another name for Aphrodite, a beautiful Greek goddess.