The Orange Sulphur Butterfly is a very common North American butterfly with a bright appearance and a relatively small size, found across the open lands. The Orange Sulphur has wings of pale yellow-orange peppered with sparse spots of blue-brown and outlined in a light pink border. The female often has small white or silver spots on the underside of her wings.
“Orange Sulphur – Blanket Flower“, by Ken Slade, licensed under (CC BY-NC 2.0)
Orange Sulphur Facts
Butterfly Family: Whites and Sulphurs (Pieridae)
Butterfly Subfamily: Coliadinae
Butterfly Wingspan: 1 3/8 – 2 3/4 inches
Butterfly Habitat: A wide variety of open sites, especially clover and alfalfa fields, mowed fields, vacant lots, meadows, and road edges
Orange Sulphur Host and Nectar Plants
Host Plants:
- Beans
- Peas
- Alfalfa
- White Clover
- Garden Vetch
- Wild Indigo
Nectar Plants:
- Nectar from various flowers
- Milkweeds
- Dandelion
- Goldenrods
- Asters
- Violet
- Tennessee Coneflower
- Ironweed
- Lanceleaf Gumweed
- Clover