Leighton Photography & Imaging

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Cabbage White Butterfly

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One of those maddeningly fast and difficult to photograph butterflies, the cabbage white never seems to stop flying, even while it is feeding. Although it is native to Europe, Asia and North Africa, it was accidentally released in Canada in the 1860's and spread throughout North America where it has become a pest to Brassicaceae crops (cabbage, kale, broccoli, horseradish, etc.) as the voracious little caterpillars are better known as the cabbage worm (not a real worm). This one was found feeding on Himalayan blackberry blossoms in an open field near the Carbon River near Mount Rainier, Washington.

Copyright
Rich Leighton
Image Size
9999x6673 / 45.4MB
Keywords
Animalia, Arthropoda, Carbon River, Insecta, Lepidoptera, Melmont Ghost Town, PNW, Pacific NW, Pacific Northwest, Pierce County, Pieridae, Pieris, Pieris rapae, Washington, animal, arthropod, beautiful, beauty, bug, butterfly, cabbage butterfly, cabbage white, color, fauna, insect, invertebrate, natural, nature, small cabbage white, small white, spots, spotted, summer, white, white butterfly, wild, wildlife
Contained in galleries
Sulphurs/Whites
One of those maddeningly fast and difficult to photograph butterflies, the cabbage white never seems to stop flying, even while it is feeding. Although it is native to Europe, Asia and North Africa, it was accidentally released in Canada in the 1860's and spread throughout North America where it has become a pest to Brassicaceae crops (cabbage, kale, broccoli, horseradish, etc.) as the voracious little caterpillars are better known as the cabbage worm (not a real worm). This one was found feeding on Himalayan blackberry blossoms in an open field near the Carbon River near Mount Rainier, Washington.