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jonnysinsectcatalogue · 7 months
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Mexican Fritillary - Euptoieta hegesia
I'm absolutely overjoyed to share these beautiful Butterfly pictures! Not only is the insect in question a real stunner, but these images also represent the first close-ups of the ornate and elegant Fritillary Butterflies (Tribe Argynnini) on this blog. In general and from my own experience, Fritillaries are incredibly quick to flee if they sense danger approaching! They only ever seem to land when they investigate flowers, but otherwise keep their distance. In fact, the genus "Euptoieta" name originates from a Greek word meaning 'easily scared'. Prior to this, I've only been able to share one image of my own photography from High Park, and even then it was taken from far away and merely included as a comparison photo to Fritillary pictures shared with me by a dear friend on her yearlong Asia trip (who was available to get much closer than I did). With these pictures from a very dear friend enjoying a Mexico vacation (for which I'm very thankful for), the beauty and detail of these royal and gilded Butterflies can be observed gloriously. The sole exception here being the legs which are concealed by the wings. Just keep in mind that as a Brush-Footed Butterfly (family Nymphalidae)* it only has 4 legs in use for walking and landing.
As this Butterfly's common name suggests, its range includes Mexico where it can be seen year-round due to the favorably warm weather. It can also apparently be found in the states of Texas and Arizona (and occasionally Florida) in the latter half of the year and has made its way to other tropical areas such as Cuba. When you see a Fritillary Butterfly flying around, no matter where you find it you'll recognize every future Fritillary as soon as you see one. These gorgeous Butterflies are easily recognized by their marvelous wings, the tops of which are laced with orange scales and accented with dark striped patterns and spots; the undersides tend to have large white or silvery spots. The Mexican Fritillary is a slight exception to this rule as the underside of its wings (not seen here) have a mostly mottled appearance similar to autumn leaves with a small section of vibrant orange featuring white patches on the forewing. Moreover, this Butterfly has a bare, pure orange area on the distal section of its hindwings (where the wings meet the body). Keep an eye out for this bare section of bright orange scales: it is key for identifying this specie if you spot a Fritillary in the south-US/Mexico area. The similar looking Variegated Fritillary (E. claudia) has a completed marking pattern across its hindwings and tends to be a more golden orange rather than the saturated orange of E. hegesia. The two species are much easier to tell apart in adulthood than when enjoying leaves as Caterpillars!
*Note: In the classification hierarchy of taxonomy, remember that Family is ordered before Tribe (which itself comes before Genus). As such, all Fritillaries are Brush-Footed. Their wings are among the most magnificent of all Brush-Footed Butterflies, wouldn't you say? Although...the Monarch is still the most iconic of all.
Pictures were taken on February 11, 2024 in Mexico with a Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra.
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anipgarden · 2 years
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Pollinator Pics - August 23 2022
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This bee did not mind me taking pictures of it while I checked out my window garden. It visited a few of the salvia spires and then flew off.
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Also some friends from the backyard garden. The second butterfly, I’m not sure what exactly it is. They’re kind of small and they fly very quickly, zooming off at the slightest disturbance. I’m surprised I could get pictures today.
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theotherpages · 1 year
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Today's Dose of Nature: Gulf Fritillaries and Carolina Climbing Asters.
Our yard has a large wall where passion vines, asters, and Mexican flame vines mix - red, lavender, and orange among the green. The dead leaves provide perfect camouflage for the chrysalises of the Fritillaries, which look like a curled dead leaf.
--Steve
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onenicebugperday · 2 years
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@slimeel submitted: So the next day after I submitted the Mexican fritillary caterpillars, I saw this pretty butterfly (which I'm about 80% sure is a Mexican fritillary).
These are all from the same individual btw, they kept on this spot for a few hours before eventually flying away.
Yes, it sure is! Likely it just emerged. It takes a few hours for their wings and exoskeleton to inflate and dry properly before they can go do butterfly stuff!
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kenneturner · 2 years
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Mexican Fritillary on Mahogany Milkweed -- Butterflies In Love
Mexican Fritillary on Mahogany Milkweed — Butterflies In Love
Three Mexican Fritillary Butterflies On Mahogany Milkweed.  Now Four is Sharing the Blossoms with Ants.  Can You Count the Ants?  These images were captured on Mt. Lemmon, Arizona. These Mexican Fritillary butterflies and ants love the  Mahogany Milkweed nectar. — Images by kenne Butterflies in love Courting the mountain milkweed Drinking loves nectar — kenne Related articles Butterflies…
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August 2021: Spawn Of The Monarch & Other Sights
This is the Mexican petunia that we propagated from cuttings off the plant in the front bed last Fall: 
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We have several new generations of Eastern swallowtail caterpillar on our parsley: 
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Eastern swallowtail caterpillar shedding its old skin: 
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Swamp milkweed seed pods: 
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Milkweed is a host plant for Monarch butterflies & we have caterpillars which I’m excited about: 
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I can’t believe I didn’t notice them until they got this big: 
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Sprig of chocolate mint right before I ate it: 
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A great beer for a hot day in late August: 
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Saturday backyard garden harvest: 
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amagard · 6 years
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varigated frit 1 ( explored )
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varigated frit 1 ( explored ) by Geoff Anderson Via Flickr: Varigated Fritillary Its always amazes me how you go to look for one thing, and find somethign completely different and unexpected thats just as good. This was one of those cases. i was outside trying to find a Golden Northern Bumble bee ( dont worry...working on those photos ;) ) when I noticed two butterflies fighting with each other mid air. One was a Painted Lady, the other was different, it landed and i immediately recognized it as a Fritillary. So switch lenses and tiem to work this guy. This one is about half the size as the Great Spangled I posted over the weekend but was still cool to find in my yard. luckily it hung out for a while feeding on these Mexican Sunflowers so where I could get into position and shoot. The heat has made butterfly shooting very good lately, but in the 30-ish minutes I was outside photographing this one I completely drenched my clothes, good thing I had to change anyway.
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gpro123 · 6 years
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It's that time of year when my Mexican Sunflowers are in full bloom and full of butterflies. I counted nine different species in a matter of minutes, including this Gulf Fritillary and Monarch butterfly. #gulffritillary #monarchbutterfly #butterfliesofinstagram #butterfly #nature #wildlife #igersstpete #cleargram #lovefl #mexicansunflower
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thegreenman · 7 years
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Mexican Flame Vine is blooming now
Mexican Flame Vine is blooming now
Pseudogynoxus chenopodioides:Pseudogynoxus confusus, Senecio confusus, Mexican flame vine, Orange glow vine
This vine attracts Monarchs, bumblebees, eastern tiger swallowtails,gulf fritillaries, hairstreaks, honeybees, hummingbirds, julia butterflies, painted lady butterflies, pipevine swallowtails, skippers, sulphurs, queens, zebra longwings and more…
More info here: Monarch Butterfly Garden
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dibblersgarden-blog · 7 years
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Linda Peterson’s green-walled xeriscape garden: San Antonio Open Days Tour
The highlight of the recent San Antonio Open Days garden tour, as I knew it would be, was Linda Peterson’s beautiful xeriscape and green-walled courtyard garden. Twice before I’ve had the pleasure of exploring Linda’s garden (in September 2015 and April 2016), and the artistry of her plant combinations, skillful pruning, and integration of garden art always delights.
Since I’ve written about Linda’s garden twice before (see links in top paragraph), I won’t do a play-by-play of her garden features. Let’s just stroll, shall we? First, the front garden outside the gray-green courtyard walls…
Agave weberi with purple-flowering cenizo. Lucky Linda for having her barometer plant — i.e., cenizo — burst into bloom for the tour! The timing of an ephemeral cenizo bloom cannot be planned since it responds to rainfall and/or air pressure changes.
A pair of octopus-armed steel agaves accent a corner planting of cenizo (pruned up like small trees), sprawling dalea, and ‘Blonde Ambition’ grama grass.
Linda has a knack for artfully pruning plants. She’ll prune up foliage to show off trunks or lift a plant’s “skirts” above the gravel mulch. Even shrubby rosemary gets neatened up with selective under-pruning.
A sinuous live oak’s snaky limb reaches out from a hole in the wall to embrace a stump seat and a wood-plank table.
It’s wonderful, and a one-of-a-kind feature that epitomizes Linda’s embrace of the Texas climate and its natural beauty.
A side view from the front walk, where a stepping-stone path leads around the tentacled live oak
Society garlic blooming alongside another steel agave
My friend Cat and I both exclaimed over this cute-as-a-button flowering plant, which looks like a compact gomphrena. I can’t remember the ID from Linda (maybe ‘Gnome’?), but I distinctly remember her telling me she found it at Lowe’s. Go figure!
“Beware: Sharp spiny plants with evil intent” — that dry humor is a dead giveaway that Linda made up this sign herself. And of course we gardeners know the real purpose of such a sign is to protect our precious plants, not the people who read it. Mind your feet, people!
Doesn’t look particularly evil, does it?
Heading around to the side yard
I always get a kick out of this grinning crocodile planter.
A Gulf fritillary butterfly enjoying purple lantana
Wavy-leaved prickly pear
Another big Weber agave
Tree limbs embrace overhead, as soap aloes hoist orange-flowered bloom spikes.
On the other side of the front yard, a side path widens into a small patio with a rustic bench. A green cloud of bamboo muhly grass hides the neighboring driveway from view.
“I’m nuts about you,” this stone squirrel could be saying to the Agave mediopicta ‘Alba’. (Groan)
Palms in culvert-pipe planters and a Weber agave
Looking back from the end of the path you get a marvelous view of the writhing arms of the Weber agave underplanted with writhing foxtail fern, backed by writhing live oaks. That’s a lot of writhing!
Step into the walled courtyard and you’re in Linda’s private outdoor living room. A pair of metal rhinos contemplates crossing the patio for a drink at the Mexican beach pebble “stream.” A winding river of soap aloes echoes the curving stone stream, and a variegated agave seems to wave encouragingly.
Metal armadillos root around in the garden bed.
The patio by the outdoor fireplace looks bigger and more inviting than ever. Linda has lightened up this year with fewer chairs and a see-through table.
An outdoor rug adds a bit of coziness and definition too.
A built-in bench along the wall holds an assortment of pumpkins, squash, succulents, and a candle lantern.
Even the metal barrel cactus were lit during the tour!
Such a relaxing space
Don’t you want to lounge here and take a nap under the live oaks?
A metal iguana guards a stand of ‘Vertigo’ pennisetum and a container fountain.
A couple of chairs plumped with pretty teal pillows with small mirrors sewn on for sparkle
I love Linda’s flowers made of bent copper tubing.
They show up so well against the minty green wall.
Heading around to the back garden, you stroll past a collection of potted plants and an elevated deck with cattle-panel privacy screening.
Cattle panel deck skirting is cloaked with fig ivy. No, it doesn’t stay this way on its own. Linda trims it to show off the grid pattern of the wire panel.
Understated pots in shades of brown are guarded by a metal horny toad — Texas’s state reptile, ya know.
A faux-bois fountain is a focal point at the end of the driveway.
An umbrella-shaded patio beckons where the path curves around the house.
A hanging wicker egg chair and bench offer additional seating.
Two metal giraffes nibble bamboo leaves nearby.
There’s not a patch of lawn in this low-water garden, but even so it feels lush and green.
Where there used to be a bottle shrub, Linda now has a hanging bottle tree, a less-common variation on the trunk- or pole-style bottle tree of the South. Linda uses lots of hanging objects — plants, lanterns, bottles — to draw the eye upward into the trees.
On a terrace off the back of the house, privacy is assured with a striking, contemporary privacy screen, which Linda designed out of leftover scraps of roofing metal (after their standing seam roof was installed) and she and her family riveted together. A bubbling fountain container topped with blue slag glass and a collection of containers completes the appealing scene.
Container detail
My thanks to Linda for sharing her remarkable garden again and letting us linger there so long!
And thank you, dear reader, for following along on my recap of the San Antonio Open Days Tour. I unfortunately ran out of time to see a couple of the tour gardens, but I enjoyed the ones we saw. For a look back at the old San Antonio style of the Tupper Beinhorn Garden, click here.
I welcome your comments; please scroll to the end of this post to leave one. If you’re reading this in a subscription email, click here to visit Digging and find the comment box at the end of each post. _______________________
Digging Deeper: News and Upcoming Events
Don’t miss the Austin Open Days garden tour sponsored by the Garden Conservancy on November 4.
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Passiflora incarnata, or purple Passion flower, is definitely one of my favorite butterfly plants. It is a larval host for the gulf fritillary, the zebra longwing, the Mexican and Julia butterflies- and it is just so, so cool to behold. They’re kind of hard to come by around here, unless you grow them from seed (the squirrels make that a challenge). I planted this one along my fence, and it is using the bougainvilleas to climb. I’m hoping to make a giant arbor of passion vines! #gardendesign #butterflygarden #organicgardening #butterfly #floridagardening @gardendesignmag @instagardeners @discovermartin (at Jensen Beach, Florida)
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reddirtramblings · 7 years
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Lately, I’ve been thinking a lot about love and late-summer flowers. I’m not sure what brought on these musings, but I think it may have something to do with turning the big double nickel last week.
I’m a late-summer flower myself.
I’m also helping my mother sell her home and move into independent living, letting my children grow up and turning my mothering to Monarch caterpillars. I’ve watched the devastation of two hurricanes in the news with alarm, resignation and then love and admiration for those who helped. Plus, I finished listening to the S-Town podcast and read Y is for Yesterday (A Kinsey Millhone Novel), by Sue Grafton, on my birthday.
Whew! I have a lot going on. Please bear with me as I sort out my thoughts. It’s good this blog is called Red Dirt Ramblings, especially today. Grab a cup of coffee or tea and wander with me, okay?
Monarch caterpillar on butterfly weed.
Honestly, I was feeling kind of dismal about the state of the world last week until I steeped myself in prayer and cut more milkweed for my baby Monarchs.
The hurricane coverage and overall media misery were starting to get to me, and S-Town and Y is for Yesterday didn’t help either. As I listened to S-Town, I began to feel like a voyeur. The series took an especially dark turn in the last chapter which made me want to cry for John B. McElmore. I think this opinion piece by Jessica Goudeau in The Atlantic sums my dilemma up pretty well. It does contain spoilers so keep that in mind if you read it. One sentence from the poetry and letters she discussed stood out for me “Probe your own life and past if you must, but you cannot use another person’s trauma without permission for your aesthetic gain.” At the end of the podcast, only ashes remained, along with an icky feeling of crawling through one man’s private angst.
As for Y is for Yesterday, I bought and saved it for my birthday. For me, it’s a kind of ritual because I’ve read all of her books from the beginning. I met Grafton, and I admire her greatly. After all, I’ve only written one book that’s been published. I don’t want to give anything away in the 25th installment of my favorite detective series, but the ending wasn’t the least bit redemptive. Grafton wrote another book in the series with a similar ending, and it wasn’t my favorite either. While life is messy, novels, especially detective novels, are all about setting the universe back to rights after something throws it into chaos. It’s why people read detective novels. Some of you might argue that things in fictional Santa Teresa, CA, were set right, but I didn’t think so. I did enjoy much of the novel and laughed out loud at Kinsey Millhone, who I’ve grown to love as an old friend.
With dismay, I began to wonder if we’d forgotten how to tell redemptive stories. In our society’s effort to become ever more secular, we have forgotten how to read anything that challenges us, including the Bible. Whether you believe in God or not, the Bible is a great piece of literature with extremely good advice. I would also argue we’ve forgotten how to immerse ourselves in Nature, another great teacher.
Not a Monarch, but instead, a mimic, the Viceroy butterfly, Limenitis archippus. The Viceroy has a smile on its lower wings that the Monarch doesn’t have. I think this is the first year I’ve seen a Viceroy in my garden.
After much prayer, I began to see my care for my Monarch caterpillars as a metaphor for God’s love for us. The caterpillars have no idea I’m watching over them. They just eat and poop and do their thing. They’re rather helpless. They can also be quite hard on each other so I sometimes separate them when they crawl too close. When I pick them up–after making sure my hands are clean–immediately, they curl into a C of defensiveness. It’s all they know. I gently place them near some milkweed, leave them alone, and soon they’re back doing their thing. I watch over these creatures as if each one is precious cargo because it is. Monarchs are basically endangered even if it isn’t official yet.
I’m not saying people are like caterpillars. Obviously, not, but being a woman of faith, I see God’s unconditional love to be similar to my care for these small insects that will eventually change into something much more glorious than when they first began. (Click on pictures in the galleries to make them larger.)
Monarch chrysalides in the screened habitat.
These chrysalides hanging off of milkweed branches don’t really show how beautiful a Monarch chrysalis is.
Monarchs love Salvia leucantha, Mexican bush sage. It’s a late-summer flower that will bloom in a couple of weeks.
There’s a good reason why caterpillars and butterflies are symbolic of metamorphosis and rebirth.
My children, by the way, are completely grossed out that I have cages all over the dining room with caterpillars in various stages and sizes. I keep telling them caterpillars are not gross. In fact, if you run your finger gently across one’s back, it is silky to the touch. Plus, their camouflage coloring is quite beautiful. They blend in with the milkweed. Not so for adult butterflies who live for such a short and glorious time.
Brilliant Gulf Fritillary butterfly resting on tropical milkweed in the garden.
Gulf Fritillary on ‘Oklahoma Salmon’ zinnias. I think I’ll grow these with Zinderella Peach zinnias next year. Wouldn’t that be fun?
Salvia x ‘Ember’s Wish’ is one of the most beautiful flowers I’ve grown this year. It looks so great with the ‘Oklahoma Salmon’ zinnias. I had to order this salvia so I’ll be taking it inside. The shipping was very expensive. No one that I know of sells it locally.
As for God’s love, I think butterflies and late-summer flowers are good points of reference. There are many more efficient pollinators out there than butterflies. I’m not sure Nature needs butterflies, but humans do.
Autumnal sneezeweed up close with a bumblebee.
Autumnal sneezeweed has a plethora of flowers that bloom when everything else is tired.
Next to this lime green coleus autumnal sneezeweed really shines.
When the news, the podcast and my reading became too much for me, I wandered outside into my messy late-summer garden. My favorite flower of the moment is Autumn sneezeweed, Helenium autumnale. I planted smallish plants last fall, and they are glorious this summer. They, along with the still-blooming Phlox paniculata ‘Bright Eyes,’ are much favored by pollinators, and the late-summer bloom is all about feeding the pollinators before winter sets in. I’m still waiting for the asters to bloom in a blue haze, but this year, I’m actually enjoying wild ageratum, Eupatorium coelestinum, a/k/a mistflower, for the first time. I used to hate it because it is so prolific, but it’s a favorite nectar plant of adult Monarchs so I’ve learned to pull as much as I can in spring and enjoy the rest. The same is true for garlic chives, Allium tuberosum, and obedient plant, Physostegia virginiana, which I can’t seem to eradicate. Don’t plant them if you don’t want them until the end of your days. Since I didn’t deadhead much in July, these plants are carrying the garden through early September.
Eupatorium coelestinum, mistflower or wild ageratum is another thug, but doesn’t it look grand against Panicum virgatum, Virginia switchgrass?
A closeup of Eupatorium coelestinum, mistflower or wild ageratum much belowed by butterflies.
Physostegia virginiana, obedient plant, is a pollinator favorite. It is also an aggressive thug so keep on it or your whole garden will be this one plant.
Physostegia virginiana, obedient plant, is not obedient. I think some gardener was having a joke on all of us.
Painted Lady butterfly on stonecrop sedum. I don’t which variety. It’s shorter than ‘Autumn Joy’ and not as bright as ‘Neon.’ Who knows? It’s probably one I bought at the end of the season last year.
Pretty soon, asters and garden mums will join the other flowers, and the garden will have a kind of rebirth before it dies in late autumn after a killing freeze.
The late-summer garden beckons like a lover in late summer and fall.
One of my favorite spots in the garden right now is this border next to the garage and sidewalk. It’s looked great all summer.
Another view of the back garden and this favorite border filled with coleus and native plants, along with daylilies. I’ll be digging up the daylilies which were host plants for the tour.
Callicarpa japonica, Japanese beautyberry blooming for all its worth.
The garage border is still looking good.
We had a party last weekend, and several of my friends wanted to see the gardens. We walked and talked, and I pointed out butterflies and moths flitting amongst the blooms. My friends were amazed at the beauty of these small creatures like the Hemaris thysbe, hummingbird clearwing moth. These moths dart in and out of the phlox like hummingbirds hence the name. They are one of the best reasons to grow phlox. Need more good reasons? How about the Painted Lady butterflies, Vanessa cardui, which are so abundant this year. Painted Lady butterflies also adore stonecrop sedum, Sedum spectabile, so plant it too.
Hemaris thysbe, Hummingbird Clearwing moth on P. paniculata ‘Bright Eyes’ phlox.
Speaking of hummingbirds, I have a couple of males that check me out every time I go out to get more milkweed. They love the zinnia patch this year and protect it fiercely. They are so cute but so naughty keeping all of the other creatures except wasps on the wing. Bill caught sight of them of them the other day and was charmed by their antics.
Butterflies and late-summer flowers both speak to me of God’s love and also the quick passage of time. Much was made of horology, the study of time, in S-town. It was the best part of the podcast. John B. was a genius who built and repaired beautiful timepieces throughout much of his life. Check out this sundial he built for his friend, teacher, and mentor, Tom Moore. I think McLemore loved people fiercely, but couldn’t accept their love in return.
Like the caterpillars and the late-summer flowers, we bloom and eventually fade away. I just hope we all experience metamorphosis and winged flight before our time is done. The late-summer garden beckons like a lover in the cool evening. Don’t forget to go outside and enjoy it before it too is
[contact-form]
gone.
Of love and late-summer flowers Lately, I've been thinking a lot about love and late-summer flowers. I'm not sure what brought on these musings, but I think it may have something to do with turning the big double nickel last week.
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anipgarden · 2 years
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Pollinator Pics - August 27 2022
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There were like six butterflies in the garden early this morning, mostly gulf fritillaries (they must be going crazy over all the passionvine taking over the garden) but a monarch or two as well, though the monarchs were gone by the time I stepped outside. But most interestingly!
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Zebra longwing! The state butterfly of Florida! I rarely see them stop by the garden, even though their host plant is also passionvine, and I even more rarely get pictures!
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onenicebugperday · 2 years
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@slimeel submitted: Hello! So I found a nice group of caterpillars that had nearly eaten a neighbor's plant whole
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And the next day, I saw these:
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Could I perhaps get IDs for them please? [removed] (remove please)
Oh, also! Bonus ants (they seemed more interested in the leaves than the caterpillar)
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Thank you!
Ohhh some children! I love them. They’re Mexican fritillaries and those are definitely the chrysalides from the same caterpillars :)
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kenneturner · 4 years
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Mexican Fritillary Butterfly Mexican Fritillary Butterfly On Mahogany Milkweed -- Photo-Artistry by kenne
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