The Zabulon Skipper butterfly has a thick, hairy body and hooked antennae, appearing to some more like a moth. Males have black borders and no stigma, with the underside of their hindwings mostly yellow with a dark brown wingbase and outer margin. The upperside of females are purple-brown with pale yellow spots, with hindwing undersides that are brown and purple-gray with a white-edged costal margin.
Male
“Zabulon Skipper” by Smithsonian Environmental Research Center, licensed under (CC BY 2.0)
Female
“Zabulon Skipper” by Anita Gould, licensed under (CC BY-NC 2.0)
Zabulon Skipper Facts
Butterfly Family: Skipper (Hesperiidae)
Butterfly Subfamily: Hesperiinae
Butterfly Wingspan: 1 3/8 – 1 5/8 inches
Butterfly Habitat: Brushy openings near moist forests and streams
Zabulon Skipper Host and Nectar Plants
Host Plants:
- Purpletop Tridens Grass
- Wheatgrass
- Lovegrass
- Bentgrass
- Orchardgrass
- Blue Grass
Nectar Plants:
- Nectar from various flowers
- Red Clover
- Purple Vetch
- Common Milkweed
- Buttonbush
- Joe-Pye Weed
- Thistles
- Blackberry
- Everlasting Pea
- Blackberry
- Fleabane
- Bee Balm
- Purple Coneflower
- Blazing Star
- Garden Pansy
- Wild Petunia
- Verbena
- Lobelia