Thanks, Chee Ming. Skippers are one of most diverse families of butterflies here in Australia. I only started to examine them this year and have been surprised at the variety in this temperate part of the country.
Thanks, Chee Ming. Skippers are one of most diverse families of butterflies here in Australia. I only started to examine them this year and have been surprised at the variety in this temperate part of the country.
Thanks, LC.
Yes, you are correct. The beetle is probably a Botany Bay Weevil (Chrysologus spectabilis) based on web searches. They are colourful and fairly large insects.
David: News coverage today was all about the Force 5 Cyclone hammering Queensland. How does that affect you? Different part of Australia? William
William B. Folsom
Hello William,
Sorry for the delay in replying. I was away to Kakadu for a few days from Thursday ("Yasi day") until last night.
Yasi smashed into Mission Beach, our favourite holiday destination. I have photos of the area in this forum from a trip in Nov 2010. Mission Beach seems cyclone prone but Yasi was particularly bad and did a great deal of damage.
I almost cancelled my trip last Thursday to Kakadu due to the cyclone threat. If Yasi had turned north into the Gulf of Carpentaria, I would probably have been stuck in Darwin for awhile. Instead, the cycone continued into central Australia and dumped lots of rain in the interior. Alice Springs had flooding right in the centre of the country. Some of wet continued south into Victoria and there is flooding underway in the western portion of the state.
Wollongong/Sydney area was pretty much untouched by the clouds of the cyclone.
I will begin posting photos from Kakadu/Litchfield/Darwin tonight. It was a great trip although short ... only 4 days in the field. I have always wanted to see that area in the wet. Kakadu is abit like the Everglades with enormous flood plains that are full of crocs. It was wet and grey at least half the time but there were plenty of butterflies when the sun was shining. Conditions were hot with high humidity. I was dripping wet almost continuously.
I sadly only saw a single elapid but pythons were numerous.
Regards,
Glad to hear you're safe, David.
Video clips of Yasi pounding the Aussie coastline on various international TV channels showed a very devastating cyclone.
And to think that my Australian friends were lamenting about the severe drought in Australia for the past decade. It almost seems that 10 years' worth of rain was dumped on Australia in the past month!
Thanks, Khew. You are correct about the rain in Australia. La Nina is a big one this time and most areas of the continent have been drenched. The only exception is the southwest corner where the drought and bushfires continue.
Les, I think that the elapid population has crashed in Kakadu due to the arrival of cane toads a few years back. Before that, Northern Death Adders, King Browns and large monitors were numerous. The elapids here are nothing to worry about even though their venom is toxic. They normally are shy and attempt to "run away" if given the opportunity. I think that the vipers where you live would pose a much greater risk of snake bite than most of the Aussie elapids. I've only seen a handful of cobras on trips overseas so don't really know what their behaviour would be like.