Thank you, sir. Looks right, but the antennal club is very different. Here's my Ochlodes brahma for comparison.
Attachment 26911
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Thank you, sir. Looks right, but the antennal club is very different. Here's my Ochlodes brahma for comparison.
Attachment 26911
In the post 89 shot there is a severe perspective distortion.
The antenna & wings are stretched out to the left & right as in a wide-angle shot.
TL Seow: Cheers.
That is possible, thank you sir!
In response to Post 89.
The confusion grows. I found another individual but without HW spots, same place and same date and time. But I had apparently IDed this as Pedesta pandita, so was in a different folder. This leads me to think that Post 89 was same species with HW spots. Angle distortion seems weird since I have many pics of these individuals with same morphology. Could you share your thoughts, sir?
Attachment 26918
Both shots show the same distortion ie the body is too long.
I think if the camera is set on wide angle for scenery shots, using the macro mode for closeup would cause the subject to be stretched out laterally ie left & right.
However, I will need a camera pro to comment on this.
It is possible both are of the same species.
In pic post 89 it is definitely a male (abdominal end, FW rounded apex & straight termen)
P. pandita can be ruled out as the male antenna is tipped orange & have a white spot.
Male P. pandita.
https://www.ifoundbutterflies.org/me...00375cb7-2.jpg
https://www.ifoundbutterflies.org/me...53f557fe-1.jpg
Female ;FW apex more pointed, termen convex, longer body profile.Antenna without a white dot.
https://www.ifoundbutterflies.org/me...529b5547-1.jpg
P. panda is not known to have HW spot.
It does not look quite right for Ochlodes brahma.
In a search for something similar, this appear to match Pedesta (Thoressa) masuriensis tali.
In the taxon tali the FW spots are yellow & the HW range from spotless to a variable number. The antenna is more gradual.
You may download the pdf, page 199, images 14 (spotless HW) & 15.
Not sure if this is possible. Zobodat pdf article.
https://www.google.com/search?q=note...hrome&ie=UTF-8
Author Hao Huang state that tali is so different that it is probably a different species.
HOwever it is found farther to the east in Sichuan & Yunnan.
TL Seow: Cheers.
Thank you, sir. I found a similar variant of Pedesta recently. Comparison with typical Pedesta masuriensis given for reference.
Typical Pedesta masuriensis.
1a.
Attachment 26922
1b.
Attachment 26923
HW spots missing, upper FW spots less compact, and background more brownish, almost like in P. pandita.
2a.
Attachment 26924
2b.
Attachment 26925
Could you look at this Neptis as well, sir? It seems like Neptis capnodes pandoces to me.
Attachment 26927
Pedesta masuriensis tali is also elevated to full species as Pedesta tali.
You can see both here.
Fig 46 & 47 ( underside) P. masuriensis.
Fig 48 & 49 (underside) P. tali.
The underside often have 3 spots here rather diffuse.
https://zenodo.org/record/3990965#.YHMMQB8zaUk
TL Seow: Cheers.
Post 97.
Agreed. It should be Neptis capnodes.
4 species are somewhat similar.
FW submarginal spots gently curved at apex; FW postdiscal spots rounded & well separated.
HW discal band of nearly uniform width.
http://yutaka.it-n.jp/lim1/720190010.html
http://yutaka.it-n.jp/lim1/720120010.html
FW submarginal spots distinctly bent in at apex; FW postdiscal spots may be large & close.
1. Neptis capnodes: HW discal band of nearly uniform width.
http://yutaka.it-n.jp/lim1/720170010.html
2. Neptis soma ;HW discal band broader at costa.
http://yutaka.it-n.jp/lim1/720180010.html
TL Seow: Cheers.
Many thanks, sir. Could you check this Rapala as well? I think this is Rapala tara but the tornal spot isn't very much diffused. Maybe R. damona?
Attachment 26928