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Colias christina Fabricius, 1807
Christina's Sulphur; Sulphurs
Family: Pieridae (Whites, Marbles, and Sulphurs)
Species account authors: Crispin Guppy and Jon Shepard.
Extracted from Butterflies of British Columbia.
Introduction to the Butterflies of BC
The Families of Lepidoptera of BC

Photograph

© Norbert Kondla     (Photo ID #5026)

Map

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Distribution of Colias christina in British Columbia.
(Click on the map to view a larger version.)
Source: Butterflies of British Columbia by Crispin Guppy and Jon Shepard © Royal BC Museum

Species Information


Adult

Male Christina's Sulphurs are highly variable in colour, ranging from predominantly orange to mostly yellow with an orange tint. Females are even more variable, with the same range of colours as the males, plus various pale shades through to cream white. Females may have well-developed dark wing borders, or they may lack any dark markings. Both sexes always have a pink ring around the ventral hindwing discal cell spot, and the dorsal hindwing discal cell spot is orange. There are sometimes submarginal spots on the underside of the wings.

Immature Stages

Mature larvae from Laggan (Lake Louise), AB, are dark yellow green. There is a white basal stripe, with a short red dash through it behind each spiracle. Pupae are yellow green, with a broad yellow stripe from the wings to the underside of the end of the abdomen. Below the yellow stripe, a dash of red brown crosses the three abdominal segments behind the wings (Edwards 1887-97).

Subspecies

The nominate subspecies (TL: Mountain Rapids, Slave River [near Fitzgerald], AB [Kondla 1995]) occurs in northeastern BC and the East Kootenay. The ventral hindwing is yellow with a heavy dusting of grey scales. The upperside of females is either yellow with prominent pale orange flushes on the wings and a broken black wing border, or cream with faint orange flushes and only a fragmentary grey wing border. Colias alberta K. Bowman, 1942 (TL: Wembley, AB) is a synonym of the nominate subspecies (Kondla 1986), with the type series being all Christina's Sulphurs except one paratype from the Kootenays of BC, which is C. eurytheme (N.G. Kondla, pers. comm.). Subspecies kluanensis Ferris, 1981 (TL: Kluane Lake, YT) may occur in northwestern BC; we have been unable to confirm the report from the Haines Highway of Layberry et al. (1998). This subspecies has a dark green ventral hindwing, and the dark dorsal wing borders are darker and wider than in christina, especially in females. There may be a long cline between subspecies kluanensis and subspecies christina in the southern Yukon (Layberry et al. 1998).

Genus Description


Colias is the name of a promontory on the coast of Attica where there was a tem pie of Aphrodite. There is no obvious relationship to the butterfly, but the name may be a pun (Emmet 1991). An alternative explanation is suggested under Pontia. The common name "sulphurs" is derived from the yellow "sulphur" colour of most species.

Sulphurs in BC are generally medium-sized butterflies that are yellow, orange, white, or (one species) yellow green with black markings. The wings of males always have a solid black border, with the exception of the Arctic Sulphur. The black borders of females contain extensive pale areas, or may be greatly reduced or absent. There are several multivoltine species that show considerable seasonal variation in wing colour.

There are about 70 species of Colias in the world. The centre of distribution in North America is BC, with more species (13) than any other province or state. Colias species may all be inter-fertile, with natural hybrids known for most species combinations where they occur together in the wild. The species have behavioural, ecological, and physiological differences that maintain separation of the species in the wild (Hovanitz 1963).

Eggs are laid singly on the leaves of the foodplants, and are pale yellow green to cream, later turning orange. Young larvae are slender, yellowish or green, and smooth-skinned with a thin coat of fine hairs. Mature larvae are yellow green or green with fine black dots all over, and stripes of various colours running along the back and sides. Sulphurs hibernate as second to fourth instar larvae (except Canadian Sulphurs, which hibernate as fifth instar larvae), and then complete development in the spring. There are five larval instars in all Colias (Ae 1958a). Pupae are fastened head up with a girdle around the middle.

Members of the genus utilize a wide range of foodplants, although each species specializes to a greater or lesser extent. Larvae of sulphurs feed on plants in three groups: legumes (Fabaceae), Vaccinium (Ericaceae), and Salix (Salicaceae). Sulphurs occur in a wide range of habitats, including arid sagebrush areas, alfalfa fields, meadows, alpine tundra, and forest bogs.

Sulphurs always rest with their wings folded over their backs, and bask in the sun by leaning to the side to allow the sun to warm the underside of their wings. It has been demonstrated for several species (C. meadii, C. nastes, C. philodice, and C. eurytheme) that the darker the pigmentation on the underside of the wings, the more heat can be absorbed from the sun while basking, permitting greater flight activity in cold environments (Kingsolver 1985).

There is relatively little variation in wing pattern between many species, making identification difficult. The key characters mentioned in the species discussions are shown in the figure.

Biology


Adult Christina's Sulphurs are in flight in June and July. They occur in open, dry pine and spruce forests that have legumes such as Vicia growing in forest openings.

Outside BC larval foodplants are in the family Fabaceae, including Hedysarum sulphurescens, Lupinus, and Thermopsis rhombifolia (McDunnough 1922; Klassen et al. 1989; Bird et al. 1995; Layberry et al. 1998).

Habitat


Christina's Sulphurs commonly occur at low elevations in northeastern BC, and are rare at low to mid elevations in the Kootenays.

Distribution

Distribution

Christina's Sulphurs occur from southern YT through northern BC and southwestern NT to MB, and south to MT and SD.

Status Information

Origin StatusProvincial StatusBC List
(Red Blue List)
COSEWIC
NativeS5YellowNot Listed



BC Ministry of Environment: BC Species and Ecosystems Explorer--the authoritative source for conservation information in British Columbia.

General References