
Have a goodun
Wurzel
Thanks Wurzel! The SSS are doing really well; I must have seen 30 or so - nice to see them in such good numbers!Wurzel wrote:Great shot of the Pudding egg PeteBroughton is a great little site - how are the Silver-spots looking over there? I visited a fortnight ago and they were only just emerging...
Have a goodun
Wurzel
Hi Tony - although I did see a female ovipositing in quite an unusual place (nowhere near any bare earth!), I did find a few more by simply looking in the right places!Tony Moore wrote:Did you watch a female SSS ovipositing or search in a suitable 'rabbit-hole' site? It took me 15 mins to find a suitable site at Aston Rownant (from Jeremy Thomas's description), and there were three eggs within a sq. ft.![]()
Tony M.
Not quite; there are still several gaps that will take a year or two to fill and I think that such an undertaking should be done properly given the inevitable time investment - but I'll make it worth the waitDavid M wrote:Incredible details in those images, Pete. You must surely now have enough for a book on early stages?
Thanks Vince!Vince Massimo wrote:I have reared or monitored many Red Admiral larvae this year and witnessed a great variation in the colouration of the final instar. Of these, two were of the dark form with the prominent red spots. Interestingly, both were without spotting when they first moulted into their respective 5th instars. I am sending some images through to you to show this.
Pleased to hear it, Pete. There's definitely a 'gap' in the market for such a publication and I very much doubt there are better images of these early stages you've been following for the last year or three!Pete Eeles wrote:...there are still several gaps that will take a year or two to fill and I think that such an undertaking should be done properly given the inevitable time investment - but I'll make it worth the waitI’m meeting with a potential publisher tomorrow, and visiting the OUMNH to do more research before committing! But I strongly suspect that a book is a “go” on all fronts
Thanks Wurzel! Yes, in time. I want to "do this properly" and there are several gaps to close that will take a season (or two) to sort out. But the outline and first species description is complete - 58 or so to goWurzel wrote:Cracking stuff PeteCan I pre-pre-order a copy of your tome? :Dl
Thanks Trevor. Some chines are definitely more productive than others, for sure, but it depends if you're looking for adults or immature stages, and the two do not correlate! I suspect that the different sites become less or more suitable with each passing year, depending on the amount of land slip and resulting growth of their larval foodplant as a result.trevor wrote: When we went to the IOW for the Glanville, we found more than we could handle at Wheelers bay, but none at all at Compton. But then Bonchurch is quite sheltered, and Compton is on an exposed cliff top.