Daily Quiz
Re: Daily Quiz
Good guess Denise (the ant association) but I'm afraid it's a different species...
Felix.
Felix.
- Pete Eeles
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Re: Daily Quiz
Purple Hairstreak.
Cheers,
- Pete
Cheers,
- Pete
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Re: Daily Quiz
Such confidence!Martin wrote:It's Green Hairstreak.
and why not - you're spot on Martin!

Your turn, make it a killer..!
Felix.
Re: Daily Quiz
Which butterflies caterpillers feed exclusivly on Water Dock.
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Re: Daily Quiz
Large coppers Caterpillars
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Re: Daily Quiz
Great work Dave...over to you.Dave McCormick wrote:Large coppers Caterpillars
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Re: Daily Quiz
As far as I know there is only one, but which resident species (not migrant) do we have that shares its name with a unrelated Australian butterfly?
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Re: Daily Quiz
There is a delias that the Ausies call a Wood White, which is odd 'cos if it's the species that I'm thinking of it's quite brightly coloured... (please correct me if I'm wrong here Dave - this is stretching the limits of my memory!!)
Felix.
Felix.
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Re: Daily Quiz
is it the dingy skipper ( Toxidia peron ) ?
charles
ps there is a splendid ( erm,.. bonzer ) web-site for Australian butterflies... http://www.purvision.com/butterflies/
charles
ps there is a splendid ( erm,.. bonzer ) web-site for Australian butterflies... http://www.purvision.com/butterflies/
Last edited by Charles Nicol on Wed May 28, 2008 9:40 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Daily Quiz
not one I was thinking of, keep trying. The DIngy Skipper is not is name, its "large dingy skipper or dingy grass-skipper" so its not it.
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Re: Daily Quiz
Cabbage White?
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Re: Daily Quiz
I can find 2:
Lucia limbaria : Small Copper
Trapezites argenteoornatus : Silver Spotted Skipper
Cheers,
- Pete
Lucia limbaria : Small Copper
Trapezites argenteoornatus : Silver Spotted Skipper
Cheers,
- Pete
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Re: Daily Quiz
Lucia limbaria- It is also known as the "Grassland Copper" and thats not the one I thought about.
Trapezites argenteoornatus - Silver spotted skipper (I'll give you that Pete)
The answer I had was Delias aganippe, "Wood White" it looks nothing like wood whites we know of. see here: http://www.purvision.com/butterflies/De ... index.html also known as "Spotted Jezebel "
well I got to think harder about this in future, over to you Felix, the wood white was right!
Trapezites argenteoornatus - Silver spotted skipper (I'll give you that Pete)
The answer I had was Delias aganippe, "Wood White" it looks nothing like wood whites we know of. see here: http://www.purvision.com/butterflies/De ... index.html also known as "Spotted Jezebel "
well I got to think harder about this in future, over to you Felix, the wood white was right!
Cheers all,
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Re: Daily Quiz
Thanks for the link Dave, that's the one I was thinking of. I spent some time in Australia some years ago between leaving education and becoming a grown-up(!) and dimly remembered that there was a butterfly named The Wood White down under...
Ok, here goes. I may live to regret asking this question as there could be contention:
Which British butterfly can be said to have the largest number of different larval food plants?
By this I mean different genera of plant, rather than a butterfly that will happily lay it's egg on twenty different species of fescue grasses!
I also specifically mean largest number that are selected by the butterfly to lay on in the wild (so for example the British Swallowtail would not be the correct answer, for while the larvae will happily consume any number of plants in captivity, from Dill to Celery, the adult butterfly invariable only lays on Milk Parsley in the wild).
Sorry to make it complicated...
Felix.
Ok, here goes. I may live to regret asking this question as there could be contention:
Which British butterfly can be said to have the largest number of different larval food plants?
By this I mean different genera of plant, rather than a butterfly that will happily lay it's egg on twenty different species of fescue grasses!
I also specifically mean largest number that are selected by the butterfly to lay on in the wild (so for example the British Swallowtail would not be the correct answer, for while the larvae will happily consume any number of plants in captivity, from Dill to Celery, the adult butterfly invariable only lays on Milk Parsley in the wild).
Sorry to make it complicated...
Felix.
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Re: Daily Quiz
Green Hairstreak.
Cheers,
- Pete
Cheers,
- Pete
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Re: Daily Quiz
Crikey that Australian Wood White looks like it's been at the crayons. Cool pics!
-Mike
-Mike
Re: Daily Quiz
With in excess of thirty larval food plants recorded in the wild in Britain it is indeed the Green Hairstreak!
Clearly far too easy!!
Well done Pete, over to yoooooo.
Felix.
Clearly far too easy!!
Well done Pete, over to yoooooo.
Felix.
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Re: Daily Quiz
30! Really!!! I didn't know *that*! Put it down to a "good guess"! What's your source?Felix wrote:With in excess of thirty larval food plants recorded in the wild in Britain it is indeed the Green Hairstreak!
Anyway - I'm running out of questions given the clever lot that inhabit this forum

Here goes - aside from being our largest native butterfly and being restricted to the fens of Norfolk, why is the Swallowtail unique among the butterflies of the British Isles?
Cheers,
- Pete
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