The Horace’s Duskywing butterfly is a medium-sized brown skipper that usually perches with its wings spread. At first glance, this quick-flying, darting butterfly appears to be a moth but it is a member of the skipper family of butterflies. Both males and females have white spots on the forewing, including a white spot in the forewing cell (the oval space between veins that is toward the leading edge of the forewing, near the body); white spots are larger on females. The overall color is brown without a hint of gray. Males have a bold white line over the eye.
“Horace’s Duskywing” by Kenneth Cole Schneider, licensed under (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)
Horace’s Duskywing Facts
Butterfly Family: Skipper (Hesperiidae)
Butterfly Subfamily: Pyrginae
Butterfly Wingspan: 1 7/16 – 1 15/16 inches
Butterfly Habitat: Open woodlands and edges, clearings, fencerows, wooded swamps, power-line right-of-ways, open fields, and roadsides
Horace’s Duskywing Host and Nectar Plants
Host Plants:
- Red Oak
- White Oak
- Willow Oak
- Northern Red Oak
- Southern Red Oak
- Scrub Oak
- Willow Oak
- Post Oak
- Water Oak
- Blackjack Oak
Nectar Plants:
- Nectar from various flowers
- Dogbane
- Buttonbush
- Sneezeweed
- Goldenrod
- Peppermint
- Boneset
- Winter Cress
- Zinnia
- Blazing Star
- Purple Coneflower
- Tennessee Coneflower
- Fleabane
- Mistflower
- Dandelion
- Prickly Mallow
- White Clover
- Red Clover
- Mountain Mint