I hope this first day of fall is treating you all well! I love the changing seasons...and change in general. I never like to do the same thing for too long!
I haven't been doing much shooting recently, but I have been editing a bit. I was working back through some old photos from a 2011 trip to the Dominican Republic, and found a folder full of butterflies I'd always intended to identify but never gotten around to. I managed to nail down most of them, although one remains a mystery (any butterfly aficionados out there fancy a challenge?). Here they are:
White Peacock (Anartia jatrophae)
Gulf Fritillary (Agraulis vanillae)
Zebra (Heliconius charithonae)
And now the stumper....ready for it?
Mangrove or Tropical Buckeye (Junonia genoveva or evarete)
I don't feel so badly about being unable to pin this down, as a) the two species look incredibly similar and b) nobody seems to know which one is which! BugGuide (which I take to be the be-all-and-end-all on all things bug-related) has this to say:
"There has been a lot of confusion due to the switching back and forth of the usage of the names Junonia genoveva and Junonia evarete, and most of the photographs up to date on BugGuide were switched from current usage due to this confusion, and the resultant fact that many field guides have backwards or confused treatments as well. Hopefully the Lamas treatment will be the final word, and things won't keep switching back and forth!"
Unfortunately the Lamas treatment simply assigns the correct name to the correct butterfly, but doesn't help at all in identifying which is which. And because you can't trust the name-assignment in any other guide/source, it seems pretty much impossible to get this little bugger to species! The one that got away I suppose...
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Anyway, on to non-butterfly-related things. Got a few fun plans for the fall, and I'm hoping they'll push me to spend some time camera-in-hand. First, I'm headed out to Tadoussac, QC next week with my father in search of these:
Then down to the US of A in October on an annual hunt (but not the shooting type) for these:
I'm pretty excited for both, as I've really been jonesin' for an adventure, even a small one! Finally, on October 7 I will be giving a talk to the Hamilton Naturalists' Club about these:
The talk is open to the public, so come on out!
I think that's all the news for now - get out there and see some cool fall nature!
Kyle
No comments:
Post a Comment