Morpho laertes

The white morpho is native to the Atlantic Forest, where they are distributed throughout a landscape of multiple species.

In 1913, Hans Fruhstorfer wrote in Die Gross-Schmetterlinge der Erde: Group Morpho F. (= Leonte Hbn.).

Uncus and its lateral clasps relatively slender, valve distally spined.Morpho laertes is the best known of a small group of species that differ from all their allies by its chalky, milky, or silvery white ground-colour.

M. laertes may be easily distinguished by the connected chain of narrow, oblong, ocellated median spots on the underside of the hindwing, which have mostly only indistinct white pupils and washed-out yellowish bordering.

The upper surface resembles the figured underside, except that the forewing continues narrowly margined with black to about the middle of the median area.

Morpho epistrophus catenaria
Plate from Seitz showing undersides of M. laertes and subspecies argentinus