On the same subject.. I took some photos of the GSF in Canada a while back






I think that it's the "experts" we have to thank for spotting this misidentification that had just rumbled on for years without anyone really looking at the butterfly or questioning the identification.Paul wrote:the moral is question everything, even in the face of the "experts"
I find that if you sound authoritative enough people will believe pretty much anything..! It's particularly useful in the office ("I put those reports on your desk weeks ago, are you telling me you've lost them?")Paul wrote:I will never forget the realization that Prof's diagnosis was correct just 'cos it was he that decreed so. Whether he was right or wrong was never questioned... and you're not telling me he was NEVER wrong. He was of course VERY safe in the company of us students
What we need is some kind of glossary of terms that clearly sets out what we mean by 'resident', 'migrant', 'adventive' etc together with which species each term embraces...Paul wrote:how the f%£* can such as this and the Slate Flash etc POSSIBLY be on the British list!!!
Is this a self-sustaining population then?Pete Eeles wrote:And the policy is the reason why Marbled Fritillary (seen in Finemere Wood for the last few years) won't be on the list.
I remember a lesson for pilots about weight and balance. It involved plotting on a complicated diagram and doing a few sums. The instructor loadmaster was NOT impressed that the pencil I had used was so blunt (?) that my answer was to the nearest whole number only. The instructor said that “The best loadmasters can work it out to three decimal places”. I realised that so-called precision corresponds to knowing the balance point (centre of gravity) to the millimetre...I came across the same thing at Med School.... will never forget the realization that Prof's diagnosis was correct just 'cos it was he that decreed so....
Today someone pointed me in the direction of this Guardian article from a few years back questioning (to put it politely) 'Dr' Gillian McKeith's professional credentials. Gillian can of course currently be seen doing a wonderful job of advertising the benefits of nutrition on a certain programme set in the jungle.Felix wrote:I find that if you sound authoritative enough people will believe pretty much anything..!
I guess the only person that knows that is whoever dumped their stock in Finemere in the first place and whether they've been doing any topping up.David M wrote:Is this a self-sustaining population then?Pete Eeles wrote:And the policy is the reason why Marbled Fritillary (seen in Finemere Wood for the last few years) won't be on the list.
I really would like to get to the bottom of this sort of thing. Lindrick Common has its extraordinary range of introduced species. Chambers Farm Wood is another where apparently DNA testing of the Marsh Fritillaries shows that they aren’t even British stock.Marbled Fritillary ... in Finemere Wood
Of course, the link would helpLee Hurrell wrote:Today someone pointed me in the direction of this Guardian article from a few years back questioning (to put it politely) 'Dr' Gillian McKeith's professional credentials. Gillian can of course currently be seen doing a wonderful job of advertising the benefits of nutrition on a certain programme set in the jungle.Felix wrote:I find that if you sound authoritative enough people will believe pretty much anything..!
Not that I'd imagine many of you watch it (I don't out of choice, but other members of Hurrell Towers do).
Cheers
Lee
Hi Pete, Felix, Jack et alDavid M wrote: Pete Eeles wrote:And the policy is the reason why Marbled Fritillary (seen in Finemere Wood for the last few years) won't be on the list.
Is this a self-sustaining population then?
Some Homo sapiens immigrant populations don't seem to share that point of view.What happens if the population becomes self-sustaining? Would it then become "British"?
That's a worthy and pertinent point.Matsukaze wrote:Considering the Heath Fritillary only continues to exist because of the deliberate manipulation of its habitat, can it realistically still be considered an established British resident?