Appalachian Tiger Swallowtail
Place name abbreviations: MPEA – Middle Patuxent Environment Area; PRSP – Patuxent River State Park; PVSP – Patapsco River Valley State Park.
Click on the common name to obtain additional information from the Butterflies and Moths of North America web page BugGuide is another web resource.
Legend:
| Common name [Link is to BAMONA] (wingspan range in inches) | Occurrence level & flight period. | |
| Habitat. | Typically visits (for nectaring). | Larval host plants. |
| Appalachian Tiger Swallowtail (2.5–4.5″) | Rare: May-June | Deciduous woods | Blackberry, multiflora rose | Wild black cherry | |
The Appalachian Tiger Swallowtail is most easily distinguished from the Eastern Tiger Swallowtail by two main characteristics:
- The yellow dashes on the ventral forewing almost merge to form a continuous band with very little black separating them (top arrow/red oval)
- The black edging on the ventral hindwing is not scalloped but more straight (bottom arrow/blue oval).
(Annette Allor and Linda Hunt found it on April 24, 2026, only a little earlier than the May-June time span specified for the Appalachian region, which would tend to have a later start to the season.)

