When it comes to fast flyers with a flair for flowers, the skipper butterfly makes quite the landing. These pint-sized pollinators are easy to miss—until you spot one zipping through your garden as if it"s late for an appointment. Catch one pausing on an Echinacea flower—like the one photographed at the Rockefeller State Park in New York, United States—and you"ve hit the jackpot. Skippers aren"t your average butterflies. Technically part of the superfamily Papilionoidea, they"re often mistaken for moths thanks to their stout bodies and erratic flight patterns. But unlike moths, they"re active by day, have clubbed antennae with a hook at the end and wings they usually hold at quirky angles. Their name? It comes from their quick, darting flight.
Skipper butterfly on an Echinacea flower
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
A different kind of toucan
-
Rock River Falls, Upper Peninsula, Michigan, United States
-
Nap your worries away
-
International Sloth Day
-
A gorge-ous place to drop in
-
Walking a rocky rainbow
-
Bản Giốc – Detian Falls, Vietnam
-
Paro Tsechu Festival, Bhutan
-
Badlands National Park, South Dakota, USA
-
Everglades National Park, Florida, United States
-
Mount Hamilton, San Francisco Bay Area, California, United States
-
Lake Bled, Slovenia
-
Giant cuttlefish, Whyalla, South Australia, Australia
-
Pride in London
-
Leap Day
-
A record-breaking reign
-
Harbour and longtail boats at Ko Samui, Thailand
-
The oldest way to fly
-
Hogmanay
-
A prehistoric pavement
-
Koala
-
Creating a better world
-
Anshun Bridge, Chengdu, China
-
World Migratory Bird Day
-
Reflecting on Christmas
-
International Archaeology Day
-
Poetry in suspense
-
City Hall, London, England
-
The worlds most exclusive beach?
-
Point Reyes National Seashore, California, USA
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

