Common wood-nymph
The common wood-nymph is a North American species of butterfly in the family Nymphalidae. It is also known as the wood-nymph, grayling, blue-eyed grayling, and the goggle eye.
Taxonomy
The following subspecies are recognized:- Cercyonis pegala abbotti
- Cercyonis pegala alope – Texas
- Cercyonis pegala ariane – Oregon, Utah
- Cercyonis pegala blanca
- Cercyonis pegala boopis – British Columbia
- Cercyonis pegala damei
- Cercyonis pegala ino – prairies
- Cercyonis pegala nephele – northern Canada and US
- Cercyonis pegala olympus
- Cercyonis pegala pegala - eastern US
- Cercyonis pegala stephensi
- Cercyonis pegala texana – Texas
- ''Cercyonis pegala wheeleri''
Description
The common wood-nymph can vary greatly. All individuals are brown with two eyespots on each forewing - the lower one often being larger than the upper one. Some may have many, few, or no eyespots on the ventral surface of the hindwing. In the southeastern part of its range, it has a large yellow patch on both surfaces of the forewing. In the western part of its range, it may have a pale yellow patch or may be lacking one. Individuals in the Northeast also lack the yellow patch, i.e., C. p. nephele. In individuals with no yellow patch, there are two pale yellow eye rings that encircle both the forewing eyespots. The wingspan measures 5.3 to 7.3 cm.These butterflies have ears at their forewing bases that are most sensitive to low frequency sounds. A conspicuous swelling of their forewing subcostal vein is directly connected to the ears.
Similar species
In the western part of the common wood-nymph's range, there are a few similar species. The Great Basin wood-nymph and the small wood-nymph are smaller, and the lower forewing eyespot is smaller than the upper one. Mead's wood-nymph has a bright red-orange area on the ventral forewing.Distribution and habitat
The common wood-nymph ranges from Nova Scotia and Quebec west to northern British Columbia south to northern California southeast to Texas and east to northern Florida.The common wood-nymph is found in a variety of open habitats, such as open woodlands, woodland edges, fields, pastures, wet meadows, prairies, salt marshes, and savannas.