Ascia monuste, localmente conocida en Argentina como pirpinto,[2][3] es una especie de mariposa, de la familia de los piéridos, que fue descrita originalmente con el nombre de Papilio monuste, por Linnaeus, en 1764, a partir de ejemplares procedentes de "Exteris terris" (= América).[4][1]
↑Lamas, G., C. Callaghan, M. M. Casagrande, O. Mielke, T. Pyrcz, R. Robbins and A. Viloria (2004) Checklist: Part 4A, Hesperioidea -- Papilionoidea, en Atlas of Neotropical Lepidoptera. Association for Tropical Lepidoptera/Scientific Publishers, Gainesville, Florida.
↑Ent collection, South African Museum; ENT collection, YPM; 36 collection, Conservation International; CE-UFPE collection, UFPE; CNZ collection, MNCR; CNIN collection, IBUNAM; INVCOL collection, UPRM; Recent Invertebrates collection, OMNH; Ent collection, MCZ; ART collection, MIZA; FUENTES collection, APN-AR; Entomology collection, MZLU; FSCA collection, DABUH; MUSENUV collection, Universidad del Valle; Insect Collection collection, INHS; Arth collection, NMSU; MZFC collection, Not recorded; MZFC collection, UNAM; ECO-CH-L collection, ECOSUR-CH; NA collection, NA; ECO-SC-E collection, ECOSUR-SC; MHNCM collection, MHNCM; ENT collection, HYO; Observations collection, iNaturalist; L collection, MZNA; Insecta collection, INB; INSECTE collection, INRA Antilles-Guyanne; Arsène Fouassin collection, Royal Belgian Institute of natural Sciences; S. M. le Roi Léopold III collection, Royal Belgian Institute of natural Sciences; Ronald Brabant collection, Royal Belgian Institute of natural Sciences; S. M. la Reine Elisabeth (Lepidoptera du Bresil) collection, Royal Belgian Institute of natural Sciences; Collection Générale Rhopalocera collection, Royal Belgian Institute of natural Sciences; MZFC-L collection, No proporcionado; CNIABM collection, MHNCM; CEAM collection, CP; MAZA collection, NA; consultado a través del Portal de datos de GBIF(enlace roto disponible en Internet Archive; véase el historial, la primera versión y la última). el 2013-07-26
↑Robinson, G. S., P. R. Ackery, I. J. Kitching, G. W. Beccaloni & L. M. Hernández (2010) HOSTS - A Database of the World's Lepidopteran Hostplants. Natural History Museum, London. http://www.nhm.ac.uk/hosts. (Consultado en diciembre 2012).
↑Braby MF, Trueman JWH (2006) Evolution of larval host plant associations and adaptive radiation in pierid butterflies. J Evol Biol 19: 1677–1690.
↑Shapiro, AM, M.L. Forister and J.A. Fordyce (2007) Extreme high-altitude Asian and Andean pierid butterflies are not each others' closest relatives. Arctic, antarctic and alpine Research 39(1): 137-142, 3 figs., 3 tabs.
↑Janzen, D. H. and Hallwachs, W. (2009) Dynamic database for an inventory of the macrocaterpillar fauna, and its food plants and parasitoids, of Area de Conservacion Guanacaste (ACG), northwestern Costa Rica[1]Archivado el 13 de febrero de 2020 en Wayback Machine. (Consultado en marzo 2013)