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Becker's White

(Pontia beckerii)

 

 

Becker's White (Pontia beckerii [W. H. Edwards])

Wing span: 1 5/8 - 2 inches (4 - 5 cm).

Identification: Upperside of both male and female is white, with black spots near tip of forewing. Inside the forewing cell is a square black bar with a curved white center. The underside of the hindwing of both sexes has wide green edging along the veins, confined by a white median band.

Life history: Males patrol ravines in search of females. Females lay eggs singly on host stems, buds, leaves, flowers, and fruits.

Flight: Several flights from March-October.

Caterpillar hosts: Plants of mustard (Brassicaceae) family including mustards (Brassica), and hedge mustard (Sisymbrium) species; and bladder-pod (Isomeris arborea) in the caper family (Capparidaceae).

Adult food: Flower nectar including hedge mustard and alfalfa.

Habitat: Arid brushlands, desert foothills and canyons, fields.

Range: British Columbia and Alberta south to Baja California; east of the Cascades and Sierra Nevada, east and south to western Montana and New Mexico.

 

Becker's White (Pontia beckerii)