Page 6 of 8
Re: celery
Posted: Wed Feb 22, 2017 2:36 pm
by celery
Cleopatra
Gonepteryx cleopatra
Clouded Yellow
Colias croceus
Cloudless Sulphur
Phoebis sennae
Dina Yellow
Eurema dina
Re: celery
Posted: Thu Feb 23, 2017 3:49 pm
by celery
I'm posting these in batches of around 4 species - simply because if the data is lost before I post I don't want to have to re-do a large and complicated upload. This posting of multiple replies in one session means, however, that sometimes things go unseen - particularly when one's diary 'flips' over a page.
So, just in case anyone who might be interested missed them, the first four
Pieridae species - Barred Yellow, Berger's Clouded Yellow, Black-veined White and Brimstone - appeared on the last space in page 5 of my diary. More importantly, that post also contained my
thanks to
Guy Padfield for his help with ID and all-round good-eggedness.

Onwards...
Green-veined White
Pieris napi
Large Orange Sulphur
Phoebis agarithe
Large White
Pieris brassicae
Little Yellow
Eurema lisa
Re: celery
Posted: Thu Feb 23, 2017 3:55 pm
by celery
Orange-barred Sulphur
Phoebis philea
Wood White
Leptidea sinapis
Re: celery
Posted: Fri Feb 24, 2017 1:54 pm
by celery
Lycaenidae
Adonis Blue
Polyommatus bellargus - I saw
a lot of Adonis Blues this year!
Re: celery
Posted: Fri Feb 24, 2017 2:08 pm
by celery
Atala
Eumaeus atala
Baton Blue
Pseudophilotes baton
Black Hairstreak
Satyrium pruni
Re: celery
Posted: Sat Feb 25, 2017 9:02 pm
by NickMorgan
Fantastic selection of pictures. I have to admit that I really struggled to separate the different Sulphurs when I was in the Caribbean.
Re: celery
Posted: Mon Feb 27, 2017 5:03 pm
by celery
Hi Nick - apologies for the late reply... weekend and all that
I know exactly what you mean - I have particular difficulty with Statira Sulphur
Phoebis statira - luckily I didn't see one of them in 2016, so no worries there!
Florida has around 50 types of skipper - including two
Pyrgus that can only be reliably differentiated by close examination of the genitalia and six Duskywings that most enthusiasts just call Horace...

Re: celery
Posted: Mon Feb 27, 2017 5:16 pm
by celery
Brown Argus
Plebeius agestis
Cassius Blue
Leptotes cassius
Ceraunus Blue
Hemiargus ceraunus
Chalkhill Blue
Polyommatus coridon
Re: celery
Posted: Mon Feb 27, 2017 5:27 pm
by celery
Common Blue
Polyommatus icarus
Geranium Bronze
Cacyreus marshalli
Green Hairstreak
Callophrys rubi
Holly Blue
Celastrina argiolus
Re: celery
Posted: Wed Mar 01, 2017 3:57 pm
by celery
Lang's Short-tailed Blue
Leptotes pirithous
Martial Scrub-hairstreak
Strymon martialis
Provençal Short-tailed Blue
Cupido alcetas
Reverdin's Blue
Plebejus argyrognomon
Re: celery
Posted: Wed Mar 01, 2017 4:11 pm
by celery
Small Blue
Cupido minimus
Small Copper
Lycaena phlaeas
Sooty Copper
Lycaena tityrus
Turquoise Blue
Polyommatus dorylas
White-letter Hairstreak
Satyrium w-album
Re: celery
Posted: Wed Mar 01, 2017 7:59 pm
by bugboy
Re: celery
Posted: Wed Mar 01, 2017 9:19 pm
by David M
bugboy wrote:Thoroughly enjoyable recent posts but that Scrub-hairstreak is something else! Not only a stunning insect but you also managed some excellent shots of a mint one, those tails can't last for more than a day or two
Agreed. Where did you see that, Celery?
Re: celery
Posted: Wed Mar 01, 2017 9:55 pm
by MikeOxon
A splendid collection for the diary. You've clearly been doing a bit of globe-trotting over the year. I'll echo David and suggest you could append location data for all of these. Some do seem to be UK

Re: celery
Posted: Thu Mar 02, 2017 1:41 am
by celery
Thanks for the interest fellas
I was lucky enough to have three foreign trips last year. Dordogne for a week in late May - which I enjoyed so much I went back for another week in mid September, then south and central Florida for ten days in late November.
Any species you don't recognise from your Tolman you can bet was taken in the U.S.
The Martial Scrub-hairstreak shots are from a place called Gumbo Limbo Nature Preserve in Boca Raton, Florida. Gumbo Limbo is a tropical hardwood tree noted for its red-coloured peeling bark. The species is tropical - native to the Bahamas, Cuba and the southern-tip of Florida. It's scarce and very vulnerable - colonies are often destroyed along with their host plants thanks to the frequent hurricanes in the Keys.
Luckily, Florida hasn't suffered from many high-category storms recently and the species is spreading northwards. Boca Raton is at the very northerly tip of its range, some 45 miles up the coast from Miami. Gumbo Limbo Preserve is a remnant of a tropical hardwood hammock - sandwiched in just a few acres between the Atlantic Ocean and the Intracoastal Waterway. Most butterfly enthusiasts go there to see Ruddy Daggerwings - pics of which are to come when I reach the
Nymphalidae - seeing these half-a-dozen Martial-Scrub-hairstreaks was a tremendous surprise and a lifetime first for me.
Thanks for looking and your kind comments. More species to come as soon as I can find the time to post. Cheers

Re: celery
Posted: Thu Mar 02, 2017 8:23 pm
by Wurzel
Looking forward to the next sets Celery if they're even a patch on the last ones they'll be brill

The Martial Scrub Hairstreak is a beut but I was most impressed by the Dina Yellow amazing cryptic patterning
Have a goodun
Wurzel
Re: celery
Posted: Fri Mar 03, 2017 3:38 pm
by celery
Thanks Wurzel
Yep, I'm particularly proud of that Dina Yellow shot - but I'd be even prouder if it was me that had actually taken it!
That shot was taken by mrs. celery... here's the story...
First day of our holiday and we showed up at Fairchild Tropical Botanical Gardens in Coral Gables, just south of Miami. The place was packed - it turned out it was their yearly 'Ramble' day. Special events, music, tombolas, stalls, all that kind of rigmarole - every scrap of wildlife scared silly by the shrieks of tiny children and the rumbling footfalls of their heavy-set grandparents.
Anyhoo, one of the stalls was the Miami Chapter of NABA (North American Butterfly Association) - manned by ancient wrinkly Floridian lepidoptera enthusiasts - dispensing information and raising awareness to the local community. Imagine your local branch of BC in 50 years time with all the same people as now and no-one had ever died - that's kinda how it was.
So, I was nattering to them about the colony of the nationally-scarce Baracoa Skipper which frequents the short-cut grassland beside the main lake when up pops the missus keen to show off her just-taken photo and get it identified by the experts. "That's a Cloudless Sulphur" says one old-fella. Well, I have a look... clearly it ain't a Cloudless Sulphur. Too small, wrong wing shape... he has a book on his table - the same one I use (Jeffrey Glassberg's
Butterflies Through Binoculars - Florida) I leaf through and point to Dina Yellow. "Well, I'll be darned... it
is a Dina!" exclaims the same dude, "We ain't seen one of them here since 2008!".
Re: celery
Posted: Fri Mar 03, 2017 4:37 pm
by celery
Riodinidae
Duke Of Burgundy
Hamearis lucina
Little Metalmark
Calephelis virginiensis
Re: celery
Posted: Fri Mar 03, 2017 4:54 pm
by celery
Papilionidae
Not a great year for Swallowtails in Florida, with barely passable pics of only 4 of the 9 (8 if you discount the possibly extinct-in-the-wild Schaus') resident species. Thanks, in-all-likelihood to the zealous and indiscriminate anti-mosquito spraying prevalent in southern Florida since the arrival of Zika virus.
Black Swallowtail
Papilio polyxenes
Eastern Tiger Swallowtail
Papilio glaucus
Giant Swallowtail
Papilio cresphontes
Polydamas Swallowtail
Battus polydamas
Scarce Swallowtail
Iphiclides podalirius
Swallowtail
Papilio machaon
Re: celery
Posted: Fri Mar 03, 2017 8:13 pm
by Wurzel
Ain't it always the way Celery - it's like the people that have American birds in their garden for 6 weeks before anyone from the Twitching fraternity finds out about it

Still at least your missus shows some interest, mine just rolls her eyes and plays the part of a 'butterfly widow'
That little metalmark is even more of a cracker than the Scrub Hairstreak

It really lives up to it's name with teh bands of metallic silver running over it's wings
Have a goodun
Wurzel