Sonni molti bello (probably all wrong), but these are all very beautiful work. I'm glad you can spend a few hours each day capturing the beauty of your island! William
Sonni molti bello (probably all wrong), but these are all very beautiful work. I'm glad you can spend a few hours each day capturing the beauty of your island! William
William B. Folsom
Nice ones, Antonio.
Sounds like your cooking is just too good! For me, the trips away always help since I do lots of walking and don't even think much of food. It is an effortless way to drop back to equilibrium.I must seriously start to dispose of the many kilos in excess!
Regards,
Yes David, when I travel for butterflies I don't think too much about food, but I don't get out my small island as much as I will.
Anyway, today in a short walk I've found a +1 for Koh Phangan:
The Common Red Flash
Who am I?
When I first looked at the second photo, I thought that it was the head of some sort of insect!![]()
Congrats on the +1, Uncle Antonio![]()
This morning a 3 hours walk in a nice track in a secondary forest gave me some good satisfaction, sun, sweat and Lycaenids.
An Oakblue
Arhopala lurida? atosia malayana? I dunno...
The Tamil Oakblue
The White-stained Oakblue
The Ciliate Blue, upper view
The Common Tit
The Malayan Sunbeam corrected
And dulcis in fundo, the rare Flos diardi capeta in a good shot "BC style" (soft background)
The Bifid Plushblue
Last edited by Angiud; 12-Sep-2012 at 08:39 PM.
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The flos shot is amazing!
It is definitely one of the finest I've seen.
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cheers
Jonathan
Arhopala atosia & lurida can be quite difficult to separate.
A. lurida is darker with better contrasted markings.
Perhaps this feaure is correct after all.
In A. lurida the hindwing postdiscal spots 4 & 5 (just to the outside of the cellend bar) have a wide overlap.
http://species.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...daMUpUnAC1.jpg
In A. atosia postdiscal spot 4 & 5 are staggered & have little overlap.
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...aMFUpUnAC1.jpg
This holds true in C&P4 plate 65/ 14 & 15.
It also holds true in Fleming's images of these 2 species.
Les, you did ask about this a long while back but at that time I thought it was a variable feature.
Thus this should be Arhopala lurida.
TL Seow
PS. An example of the local race A. atosia malayana showing postdiscal spots 4 & 5 staggered with no overlap.
http://species.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...naMUpUnAC1.jpg
Last edited by Psyche; 12-Sep-2012 at 01:37 AM. Reason: PS
Thanks again TL Seow for the ID, Jonathan and LC for the nice words.
Les, you could find the Flos in Samui, yesterday I've seen 3/4 different individual.
Ok, 8 o'clock, time to go at the same location, hoping in a good hunting
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