Category: butterflies (Page 21 of 43)

Bug of the Week: Western Pygmy Blue Butterfly

After the giant rustic sphinx caterpillar and moth last week, let’s take a look at some tiny little butterflies.

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How tiny are these butterflies? To put things in perspective, do you see the winged aphid under the flower petal to the right? You know how small aphids are, right?

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In fact, this butterfly is a Western pygmy blue, which is the smallest butterfly in North America!

Although they are called blues, their upper wings are mostly coppery brown, about the color of the forewing here.

The larvae feed on pigweed, goosefoot, Russian thistle or saltbush (Atriplex). This adult is taking nectar from a brittlebush flower.

Western pygmy blues are fairly common, but easy to overlook. Have you ever seen one?

Bug of the Week: California Patch Butterflies Flying Through

This morning our front yard was all aflutter.

california-patch-22Many of our flowers were covered with small orange and brown butterflies. I counted at least eight at once.

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I recognized that they were California patch butterflies, Chlosyne californica, which in spite of their common name occur in Arizona, too.

 

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Looks like they might be migrating, as some of them were quite tattered.

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They were fueling up on every flower they could find, particularly the rush milkweeds.

I was lucky to have seen them, because by noon they were all gone. Wonder where they are going.

Have you ever seen a butterfly migration?

Bug of the Week: What is In the Yard

What sort of insect activity did the recent rains and high humidity bring out?

slender-bee-fly-geron1. A slender bee fly, genus Geron

moth-with-spots2. A brightly-marked moth, out in full daylight

snout-butterfly3. Yay, the snout butterflies are back!

Fall is the time when we usually have a lot of caterpillars. We’ll have to see if this is a good year for them.

 

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