(Greta Oto) is a brush-footed butterfly  which wings are transparent. The tissue between the veins of its wings  looks like glass. They are found in the range which extends throughout  Central America into Mexico. 
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 Dead Leaf Butterfly
 Dead Leaf Butterfly

 Leaf Butterflies look brilliant when their wings lay flat – they come in all manner of colors and shapes. But when their wings 
fold  up they look like leaves – sometimes green, sometimes brown, as if  fallen and dead. The likeness to a dead leaf is nothing short of  remarkable. They live in forested, lush areas like New 
Guinea, southern Asia, Madagascar and India. 
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 Neglected Eighty-Eight Butterfly
 Neglected Eighty-Eight Butterfly

 A neglected eighty-eight butterfly (Diaethria neglecta) in Brazil's Pantanal displays the design of lines and dots that gave it its unusual common name. 
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 Giant Owl Butterfly
 Giant Owl Butterfly

 The giant owl butterfly falls under the genus Caligo and are commonly  called Owl butterflies, after their huge eyespots, which resemble owls'  eyes. There are about 20 species in the genus, found in the rain forests  of Mexico, Central and South America.  
Owl butterflies are very  large. Their wingspan can reach up to more than 8in and fly only a few  meters at a time. Therefore, avian 
predators  have little difficulty in following them to their settling place.  However, the butterflies preferentially fly around dusk, when few avian predators are around.
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 Queen Alexandra's Birdwing Butterfly
 Queen Alexandra's Birdwing Butterfly

 Queen Alexandra's Birdwing is the largest butterfly in the world, with a wingspan up to 1 foot (30 cm). This tropical butterfly is from northern Papua New Guinea's 
rainforest. The caterpillars eat the pipevine plant, which contains poison; this makes the butterfly toxic to predators, which will get sick if they eat it. 
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 Emerald Swallowtail Butterfly
 Emerald Swallowtail Butterfly

 The Emerald Swallowtail (Papilio palinurus) is a butterfly found primarily in 
South East Asia  and is one of the very few green butterflies around. It is also  referred to as Emerald Peacock or Green-banded Peacock Swallowtail.  There are several subspecies (from Burma, Borneo, Indonesis, Nias and  the Philippines). 
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 Zebra Longwing Butterfly
 Zebra Longwing Butterfly

 Long black wings with distinctive thin yellow bands - combined with  slow, graceful flight - characterize the zebra longwing (Heliconius  charitonius). It has a wide range of habitats, including hardwood  hammocks, thickets, and gardens. The zebra longwing is found  in south  Florida, particularly in the 
Everglades National Park. In 1996 the state legislature designated the zebra longwing as the official state butterfly. 
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 White Morpho Butterfly
 White Morpho Butterfly

 The White Morpho (Morpho polyphemus) is a white tropical butterfly from  Mexico, Central America and the West Indies. Both the upper and lower  wings are bright white, with some small light brown markings. There is a  row of small eye-looking spots on the underside of the of hindwings.  The caterpillar has been known to eat Paullinia pinnata (family  Sapindaceae) and Inga (family Fabaceae). 
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 Peacock Pansy Butterfly
  Peacock Pansy Butterfly

 The peacock pansy butterfly (Junionia almana) sports striking eyespots and purple patterns. 
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 Wood White Butterfly
 Wood White Butterfly

 The wood white butterfly is a rather delicate-looking species, often overlooked along with other members of the white butterfly family. It is creamy-white with grey tips to the upper-forewings, and has grey veins on both upper and hind wings.
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 Great Mormon Butterfly
 Great Mormon Butterfly

 Great Mormon (Papilio memnon) is a large butterfly with contrasting colors that belongs to the Swallowtail family. A common South-Asian butterfly, it is widely 
distributed and has thirteen subspecies. The female is polymorphic and has mimetic forms. 
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 Strange Butterfly
 Strange Butterfly

 Strange butterfly spotted in Northeast Brazil. 
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