Maanantai Moth

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Schinia karvainen

 

Tämän maanantain koi on kaksikko Schinia karvainen (Noctuidae) lepää siinä, minkä oletan heidän isäntäkasvinsa (Erigeron sp.). Nappasin tämän kuvan 9,000 jalat ylhäällä Kaibabin tasangolla Pohjois-Arizonassa viime kuussa. Alueen on täytynyt polttaa tulipalo muutama vuosi sitten, koska luonnonkukat olivat paksuja ponderosamäntyjen hiiltyneiden jäänteiden joukossa ja näitä koiperhoja oli kaikkialla.

Hyönteiset ja Filippiinien I

Kuukausi sitten tai niin California Academy of Sciences käynnisti täysivaltaiseksi retkikunta Filippiineille. Vaikka suurin osa käteistä käytettiin Clipper aluksen ja sukellus joukkueet, oli maanpäällisen komponentin. Vaikka en saanut mennä (ja istui kotona ja pouted), En puhu joitakin minun hämähäkki työtoverit istutetaan kerätä perhoset minulle. Harvoin sanon tämän, mutta he tekivät loistavaa työtä keräämällä Leps, ja olen hitaasti toiminnan kautta niiden bounty (kiitos Nataliya, Vanessa ja Hannah!). Tässä on yksi harvoista perhosia ne kiinni – ja olen ajatellut tätä edes tuli valoa, koska se on pakattu kanssa koit (joka perhoset tapahtuu satunnaisesti). Tämä upea Lycaenidae on Catapaecilma evansi, tunnistetaan David (indowings) päälleni InsectNet, kiitos!

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Catapaecilma evansi (Lycaenidae)

Maanantai Moth

Last week Jim Hayden guessed the moth I posted was an Australian Oecophoridae. It was a good guess because there are so many large and stunning moths in this family from Australia. One of the best has to be this one, Wingia lambertella (Oecophoridae), captured on Black Mountain in Canberra October 23, 1955 (CAS collections). The larvae feed on Eucalyptusand I for one wish this was an introduced species here. We have these pesky invasive trees everywhere, why not the moth to go with?

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Wingia lambertella (Oecophoridae)

 

Lehdistön nero XX

Tämä GOP on vähemmän haastetta, vaan enemmänkin yksinkertaista kurjaa arkistovalokuvausta. Alex Wild and others have long ago pointed out the massive failings of many stock photo sites – mutta tässä on lyhyt ja tuskallinen lepokuvaus Googlen avulla.

Vaihe 1: Kuvahaku “koi kukassa”.

Vaihe 2: Facepalm.

Here is a caption of the first page of results. Excluding the photos that have no moths and aremoth flowers” (= Phalaenopsis orchids) – vain 4 out of 18 images are correct! I might give you 6/18 if you count two obviously staged photosbut here is my list of reasons starting with 1= top left and 26 = bottom right. (list below)

1) Kunnossa, good start! This looks like a Manduca laji (Sphingidae) feeding on a Datura flower. I’ve seen this myself in the wildgreat capture!

2) Orchid

3) Downhill we go. Obviously a butterflyPhoebis laji (Pieridae).

4) Lycaenidae butterflyCallophrys laji.

5) Hesperiidaeskipper butterfly.

6) Another moth! Looks like an Autographa laji (Noctuidae).

7) Certainly a moth, however something I’m unfamiliar with.

8 ) Hyles sphinx moth nectaring. Blurry, but a moth!

9) Another skipper. Just because it’s brown doesn’t mean it’s a moth.

10) Orchid

11) Luna moth on flower. Kunnossa, yes it’s a mothbut I’m sorry, a pretty obviously staged photograph. Actias luna does not have mouthpartsyou’d never find one willingly sitting on a flower.

12) Yet another skipper butterfly.

13) Orchid

14) Vanessa butterfly! I thought the Painted Lady was about as obvious of a butterfly as possible.

15) Orchid

16) Orchid

17) Pieridae butterfly on a flower.

18) Orchid

19) Cisseps moth (Arctiinae) – our last real moth photograph. The webpage has it identified as Pyromorpha dimidiata (Zygaenidae), however the antennae are wrong and this is most likely a tiger moth in the Ctenuchinae.

20) Oh come on, butterfly! Polygonia laji.

21) Moth – mutta, stagedI’ve never come across a Sphingidae resting on a flower like this. While this family readily nectars at flowers, they don’t tend to sit on them like idiots.

22) Orchid

23) Orchid

24) Butterfly, Phyciodes laji.

25) Worst staged photograph ever. It’s a spread specimen that may or may not have been photoshopped onto the flower (it looks wonky). Broken antennae, torn up wingsYou can also see the shadow from the camera strap on the moth’s left forewing. Yet somehow it won a medal from some group on Flickr.

26) Same butterfly as 24, in color.

 

Huh huh, horrible exercise over.

Maanantai Moth

VASTAUS: Tämä ei ollut helppoa – mutta tämä suuri ja kaunis perhonen oli Australiasta ja on perheen Xyloryctidae (Philarista sp.). We have a handful of representatives of this group here in the US and Ted MacRae over on Beetles in the Bush has a few great photographs of them. Somehow I think we got the short end of the stick because this family reaches the peak of its staggering diversity in Australia. It’s amazing to me that this animal is related to the tiny grey flower moths we have!

Jim Hayden was closest with the guess of an Australian Oecophoridwhich I have photographed for next week.

If you’re interested in learning more about this family go check out the Xyloryctine Koit Australian blog!

 

This week I’m going to make the moth into a challenge. Who can tell me what family this is? Any takers on genus/species? My only hint is that this is a pretty hefty sized moth measuring in at over 53mm and it’s from the California Academy collections.

 

Net-Winged Beetle

These large and interesting Lycidae beetles (Lycus fernandezi) were abundant in south eastern Arizona a few weeks ago. Constantly flying between flowers and moist sand they were making for easy photography targets. I thought to myselfhere is a great opportunity to catch a beetle taking off!”.

Wait for it

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Lycus fernandezi (Lycidae)

 

Wait for it

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Lycus fernandezi (Lycidae)

Crap.

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Lycus fernandezi (Lycidae)

If it hadn’t been 105 degrees out and I didn’t have a cloud of flies clinging to my face I would have fixed my camera settings and waited for another chance. But this is all my patience could bearafter all it’s just a beetle!

Dancing Moth

Tässä on toinen ihana video Warren! Olen arvaamaan tämä on Choreutidae sillä tavalla siivet pidetään tanssiessa – vaikka se on liian nopea todella saada selkeä ilmeen. Koska se on peräisin eläimistö Olen täysin tunne voisin olla väärässä – so please correct me if you know better.

NABA Turns Fish and Wildlife osaksi Brainless Zombies

Tuore pois puristimet, Miami Blue Butterfly (MBB) on now listed as federally endangered by act of an emergency provision. Huzzah! (oikea?)

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Miami Blue Butterfly Perhoset Amerikan

Ensimmäinen ajatukseni oli “odota, wasn’t this already endangered?”. Kyllä, Osoittautuu MBB on valtion uhanalainen vuodesta 2002 after a previous emergency petition filed by the North American Butterfly Association (Myös). This measure seemed comprehensive enough since this butterfly occurs nowhere else in the USA. But that’s not an important detail and I don’t see any real harm in federally listing another butterfly. The Florida Keys sure need every ounce of help they can get when it comes to protecting the environment.

As an endangered species the Miami Blue (Cyclargus thomasi bethunebakeri) is a northern range extension of a species that commonly occurs throughout the Caribbean. Whether or not the US immigrant is truly distinctive enough to warrant a subspecies of its own is not something I can really address since I’m not a butterfly guy in the least. I do greatly shy away from the entire idea of a subspecies, but hey, I guess these butterfly guys need something to do! It also seems logical to me that influxes of emigrating blues would naturally change in abundance over the southern coast of Florida. In the early 1950’s these insects used to be abundant up and down beaches nearly all over the state. The last 60 odd years have been cruel to Floridadevelopment and mosquito abatement has ravaged what used to be pristine habitat. All of the butterflies are suffering.

Then I realized there was something very odd about this announcement: the emergency provision is myös listing kaikki similar blues that share habitat with the MBB as threatened and therefore protected! Miksi? Because they look like the MBB. These blues include the Cassius blue (Leptotes cassius), Ceraunus blue (Hemiargus ceraunus), and the Nickerbean blue (Cyclargus ammon). Let’s get one thing straightboth the Cassius and Ceraunus blues are not in any way itse asiassa threatened nor even rare. They can both beincredibly abundant species with a range that spans all of the Carribbean, the gulf coast west to California and inland strays to the midwest!

So I ask, how could this have passed?

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Gary Larson, The Far Side

Oh that’s rightfear mongering brought to you by the radically anti-collecting North America Butterfly Association. NABA perceives collecting as one of the gravest dangers to butterfly populations despite the incredible lack of evidence. Kyllä, every collector out there is sporting an evil black cape and making it their life’s work to extinguish beauty from the world. Somehow this organization has managed to convince the USFWS they have a point. I can’t do this provision justice, so here is the exact quote.

In addition, the Service is issuing a 4(d) special rule on these species to establish prohibitions on collection and commercial trade within the United States. This action also prohibits the import into, and export from, the United States of the three similar butterflies. Otherwise lawful activities that may impact these similar butterflies—such as legal use of pesticides, mowing, and vehicle use—are not prohibited. Extending the prohibitions of collection, possession, and trade to the three similar butterflies will provide greater protection to the Miami blue.

 

I’m honestly speechless. Hyvin, maybe I can manage a few more words.

Go ahead and mow down your patch of habitat and then spray herbicide on it. But you better not dare to collect a single bluethe USFWS is watching.

They also turn out to be rather paranoid. Toki, poaching does happen every once in a while no matter what species you protect. Whether it be for profit or food, a few odd animals will be picked off. But is there any real evidence to support this level of craziness? The majority of citations in the registrar are from cases, not peer-reviewed journals.

the Service has determined that designation of critical habitat for the Miami blue butterfly is not prudent because publishing maps and descriptions of critical habitat areas would widely announce the exact location of the butterfly to poachers, collectors, and vandals and may further facilitate disturbance and destruction of the butterfly’s habitat.

Oh I do love quotes: (lähde)

but also indicates that there is no evidence or information on current or past collection pressure on the Miami blue (FWC 2010, p. 13)… Although we do not have evidence of illegal collection of the Miami blue, we do have evidence of illegal collection of other butterflies from Federal lands in south Florida

The same Web site offers specimens of two other butterflies similar in appearance to the Miami blue; the ceraunus blue currently sells for €4.00 ($5.57), and the cassius blue is available for €2.50-10.00 ($3.48-$13.93).

Therefore, it is quite possible that collectors authorized to collect similar species may inadvertently (or purposefully) collect the Miami blue butterfly thinking it was, or planning to claim they thought it was, the cassius blue, nickerbean blue, or ceraunus blue

 

Don’t get me wrongadditional funding and protection for a rare species might be helpful as long as the habitat is safeguarded. It seems however that the vast majority of funds tend to go into captive breeding programs which doubtfully do much good. If the butterfly is vanishing from the islands then releasing clouds of them will only make for pretty photographs and not a saved species.

I will be submitting a solicited comment and I suggest you do the same. Comment here before October 11, 2011: Federal eRulemaking Portal: http://www.regulations.gov. Follow the instructions for submitting comments to Docket No. [FWS–R4–ES–2011–0043]. Or write to: U.S. mail or hand-delivery: Public Comments Processing, Attn: Docket No. [FWS–R4–ES–2011–0043]; Division of Policy and Directives Management; U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service; 4401 N. Fairfax Drive, MS 2042–PDM; Arlington, tahtoa 22203..

Maanantai Moth

 

Tämän viikon koi on video tanssi mikro Filippiineiltä (ottanut Warren Laurde). Kuten ehkä epäilet tämä on pariutumisen näyttö, joka päättyy ihan mahtava päälläseisonta. On olemassa paljon muita microleps jotka on tanssia tai näytön käyttäytymistä, mutta verkossa ei ole juurikaan muita videoita, ja harvat ovat yhtä laadukkaita kuin tämä. Luulen, että tämä on Cosmopterigidae, jotain, joka lähestyy sukua Ressia. En löydä vahvistettuja tietoja tämän suvun läheltä Kaakkois-Aasiasta (eikä sisällä mitään Mikrolepidoptera Filippiinien saarilta) – mutta googlettamalla löysin toisen kuvan siitä, mikä voisi olla tämä sama koi!

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Cosmopterigidae - Melvyn Yeo

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Maanantai Moth

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Chiricahua multidentata (Mittarit)

Tämä Maanantain koi on mahtava laji vuorilta Arizona – Chiricahua multidentata, Geometrid. Ainoa tunnettu paikka tämä laji on hyvin alkuun Chiricahua vuorten yllä 9,000 jalat (joka oli juuri bruned rapeaksi). Toivottavasti tuli ei ollut täysin tuhoisa ja väestö elpyy tulevina vuosina. Ennen 2009 tämä koi oli tunnettu harvemmasta kuin 10 yksilöt, kaikki on vangittu hieman alemmalla korkeudella Sipuli-satulalla Chiricahuassa. Vuoden keväällä 2009 pääsy aidatulle tielle johtaa kymmenien yksilöiden keräämiseen yhden yön aikana. Kaikki aiemmat ennätykset olivat olleet harvinaisia ​​harhailijoita, jotka olivat lentäneet 8500:aan′ – mutta pelkkä ylimääräisen lisäyksen teko 1000′ 500'laittoi keräilijän ihanteelliseen elinympäristöön ja yllättäen tämä koi oli yleinen! Tämä näyttää olevan par kurssi useimpien hyönteisten kanssa, hyvin harvat ovat todella harvinaisia, kun taas loput ovat vain vaikeita vangita. Joko ne eivät tule valoon, älä etsi ruokaa käsivarren pituudelta, tai elävät vain vaikeapääsyisissä elinympäristöissä. Kun löydät heidän biologiansa (tai käy tuuri) voit yleensä löytää eläimen runsaasti.

Olet ehkä huomannut myös Monday Mothin säännöllisen julkaisun – Olen ollut kentällä viimeiset kaksi viikkoa ja minulla oli pino ajoitettuja julkaisuja. Minun pitäisi nyt alkaa sekoittaa asioita enemmän!