Eupeodes corollae - a common UK Hoverfly but this is the first time I've managed to photograph a mating pair.
http://i56.tinypic.com/2laaemc.jpg
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Eupeodes corollae - a common UK Hoverfly but this is the first time I've managed to photograph a mating pair.
http://i56.tinypic.com/2laaemc.jpg
Poor little moth... got stuck in the spider's web.
http://i51.tinypic.com/14txc2a.jpg
http://i56.tinypic.com/11jrw5d.jpg
http://i56.tinypic.com/72uo2t.jpg
Thanks Frankie, that is what I thought it was, but I wasn't 100% sure. I had trouble IDing it until I got a shot of the other side of the wings which were black with a beautiful bluish colour on the edges where it looks white in this shot. Do the colours change as they mature, because I'm sure the colours are correct on this one but a shot taken a couple days later showed the beautiful otherside of the wings. Please correct me if I'm wrong but I think this is the same type of butterfly as the second shot in post #235
Thanks again
Wendy
Wendy,
Yes, you are correct about that Identification. The Red-Spotted Purples can be hard ID because they can look and act like the swallowtails. I have a few here at my new place and I love watching them fly around.
The third butterfly in that series is a Question Mark Butterfly. It's very similar to the Comma, but a little larger and the wing shape is slightly different from the Comma. And that is a very good capture of that one!
I'm happy to ID any butterflies you come across!
frankie
Cicada on a stump
http://farm7.static.flickr.com/6078/...24a27272_b.jpg
Thanks a lot Frankie. The first few times I saw this one I thought it was the swallowtail that I had been chasing. You are right the behaviour is very similar, except these guys actually landed and stuck around quite a few times. The swallowtail WOULD NEVER LAND, and I know it was a swallowtail because I had the caterpillars, and I also saw them in flight close enought to see the tail. One would just slowly drift by every day or so to tease me. :( I still loved watching them though, but would have loved to have managed a shot.
All in all though, for me it was a very good summer for butterflies. I've never paid much attention before, and really hadn't noticed anything in this area besides Monarchs, and the little white Cabbage Butterflies, but that heliotrope kept bringing them in. The Question Mark and The Red Spotted Purples were new discoveries for me.
It's getting late in the season up here, but if I see any more, I will certainly be checking with you for IDs. I also look forward to your shots to keep me going for the winter. :)
Thanks again
Wendy
That is great. And from up close like this. They must have been really busy
Thanks for the comment, Peter.
When I first discovered this pair, they were partly hidden by foliage so I struggled to get a clear shot. But when I returned a few minutes later they had decided to 'go public' and were in a perfect position for a number of different angles.
I've really enjoyed all the images posted in this thread.
To comment on all wouldn't be possible. But really I like'm all.
So I thought why not put some of my stuff here to.
http://rhermans.smugmug.com/Fauna/In...uiklibel-M.jpg
http://rhermans.smugmug.com/Fauna/In...7-Edit-2-L.jpg
http://rhermans.smugmug.com/Fauna/In...bellen-3-L.jpg
Hope you like'm
Ronny
Have been capturing a few bugs myself over the last few days...more an exercise in lens use than anything else, but still fun.
http://i56.tinypic.com/2aeo5l5.jpg
http://i54.tinypic.com/j0csi1.jpg
http://i53.tinypic.com/34dop4m.jpg
Theses are for Frankie to ID
http://i56.tinypic.com/os5ru8.jpg
http://i55.tinypic.com/2zodlyq.jpg
I do not have a macro lens so my shots are close-up using a Nikon 70-300 VR with a Nikon T6 diopter.
Here are 2 Orange Potter wasps manting.
Was a bit of a risk having to be close to this wasps which have a very painful sting :)
http://www.plottier.net/albums/userp...750-detail.jpg
http://www.plottier.net/albums/userp..._AAP0749-2.jpg