Grata volumen octo seriei inconstanter recurrentis, Geniumque Press. Veni per hoc Commentarium nuper de papilio endemico Puerto Rican. Quis mihi prorsus potest indicare cur haec fama fallit? Sit paulo fallacior quam GOP (Moneo ne quid antea consociata cum his litteris Acronyms). Hint, solum narras mihi papilionem in pictura ex Malaysia non esse responsum quod quaero!
The article’s title contradicts with the content. The habitat will receive the protected status, not the species.
Is this the solution?
The review also could determine that protected status is not warranted – the report makes it seem as if protection is imminent.
You’re both right, but not quite the answer I’m looking for! This GOP is in line with the others I’ve done and is taxonomy related, just not as glaring (I actually didn’t realize it for a while).
“Harlequin butterfly family”? There is no such thing. The PR species (Atlantea tulita) is one of the brush-footed butterflies (family Nymphalidae), while the Malayan species shown (Paralaxita orphua) is a metalmark (family Riodinidae).
Coloniae urbes. I took for granted that I’ve seen similar Riodinidae in Costa Rica – figured it wasn’t a stretch that one was threatened on PR. I actually posted this link on a message board without looking any of it up to fact check – dawned on me days later to go back and find out more about the lep. Almost snuck by me…