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Green-veined white

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Green-veined White
Green-veined White
Template:Domain:Eukaryota
Template:Regnum:Animalia
Template:Subregnum:Metazoa
Template:Phylum:Arthropoda
Template:Classis:Insecta
Template:Subclassis:Pterygota
Template:Infraclassis:Neoptera
Template:Superordo:Endopterygota
Template:Ordo:Lepidoptera
Template:Subordo:Ditrysia
Template:Divisio:Rhopalocera
Template:Superfamilia:Papilionoidea
Template:Familia:Pieridae
Template:Subfamilia:Pierinae
Template:Tribus:Pierini
Template:Genus:Pieris
[[{{{1}}}{{{2}}} {{{3}}}|{{{1}}}. {{{3}}}]]:napi
Binomial name
Pieris napi
(Linnaeus, 1758)

The Green-veined White (Pieris napi) is a well-known European butterfly, found in open country and woodland.

Like other "white" butterflies, the sexes differ. The female has two spots on each forewing, the male only one.

Although its caterpillars feeds on brassicas, it normally selects wild species, and is therefore not the pest that some other white butterflies have become.

It can produce up to three broods in a year. Recent research has shown that when males mate with a female, they inject methyl salicylate along with their sperm. The smell of this compound repels other males, thus ensuring the first male's paternity of the eggs - a form of chemical mate guarding.