Wednesday, August 6, 2008

Brookside Gardens 7/18/08

My good friend Scott and his son accompanied me to Brookside Gardens in Wheaton, MD on July 18. The gardens are lush and attract quite a number of butterflies (Click for shots).


Fiery Skipper

Peck's Skipper

Sachem Atalopedes campestris

This is a strongly-marked female. I saw no males on this day, but I have plenty in my garden!



Pipevine Swallowtail Battus philenor

This was a shy individual. Since I've been seeing Pipevines all over the place this year, it's unclear whether he is a native or a releasee from the butterfly house inside.



Eastern Tiger Swallowtail Papilio glaucus

I had fun taking shots of this female from about 50 yards away at the full 420mm extension of my camera's lens.







A much more cooperative male



A Silver Spotted Skipper Epargyreus clarus



An unknown beetle Coleoptera





But the main attraction is the indoor butterfly house that contains a mix of native, Central American, and Asian species. Some I could identify (hat tip: Sarah McVey's website has beautiful pictures and gave me a lot of solid leads on the IDs); others, not. If anyone has IDs for these, I would be grateful.

Nymphalids: Limenitidinae

The Common Sergeant Athyma perius

This Admiral relative looks very similar to species of the genus Neptis.









Nymphalids: Heliconiini

Zebra Longwing Heliconius charitonius

The light dusting on these individuals and the Sara Longwings that follow is pollen rather than a camera artifact.








Sara Longwing Heliconius sara








Postman Heliconius erato or H. melpomene
H. erato and H. melpomene are co-mimetic, and I have no idea which this is.




Tiger Longwing Heliconius ismenius



Isabella's Longwing Eueides isabella

After some debate, this appears to be an Isabella rather than a Tiger. What clenches it is the horizontal band across the middle of the forewing; this is broken in the Tiger but continuous in the Isabella, as here.







Banded Longwing Dryadula phaetusa






Unknown longwing


Nymphalids: Junonia


Chocolate Pansy Junonia iphita








Lemon Pansy Junonia lemonias




The Buckeye, Junonia coenia was here also, but I took no shots.

Nymphalids: Morphos and Owl Butterflies

Morpho helenor




Two images of the same individual with different lighting




Caligo sp.


Misc. Nymphalids

The White Peacock Anartia jatrophae


Clippers Parthenos sylvia
Two different subspecies are featured here:

P. sylvia lilacinus




P. sylvia philippensis




The Question Mark Polygonia interrogationis




Silver Checkerspot Chlosyne nycteis


Lacewing Cethosia sp.





Pointed Leafwing Fountinea eurypyle?


Unknown Nymphalid 1


Unknown Nymphalid 2


Doleschallia sp.?






Crimson Patch Chlosyne janais janais




Paper Kite Butterfly Idea leuconoe


Swallowtails Papilionidae


Variable Cattleheart Parides erithalion polyzelus


Xuthus Swallowtail Papilio xuthus






Great Mormon Swallowtail Papilio memnon agenor. This is a female; the species is substantially dimorphic.



Tailed Jay Graphium Agamemnon


Pipevine Swallowtail Battus philenor. These butterflies, native to MD, are bred in captivity, and it is unclear whether they remain in the house or are released into the wild. The former option is more likely, since bred butterflies might be disease vectors.



Hairstreaks Lycaenidae

Atala Eumaeus atala


Atlas moths!

The Atlas Moth Attacus atlas. My parents gave me a framed pair of these for my 12th birthday. It was an inspiration; how much more inspiring are these live ones!

The moths are sexed by the clear windows on the forewing. The female's window is large, with the point digging directly into the margin. These two are females.




Mating pair. The male is in the foreground, with its forewing window at a somewhat oblique angle to the margin.



JRC

3 comments:

Unknown said...

I can't help on the identifications, but I loved looking at your photographs. What a fun trip that must have been. I am envious!

Unknown said...

have you seen this site?

http://www.neotropicalbutterflies.com/Site%20Revision/Pages/Table_of_Contents1bn.html

it's great to help id butterflies..

I have a set of butterfly shots here
http://www.flickr.com/photos/annatheodora/sets/72157615075574009/
if you are interested :)

Jeff Cagle said...

Wow, those are fun shots. When and where did you take them?

The link looks really helpful. Thank you.

JRC