Showing posts with label epargyreus clarus. Show all posts
Showing posts with label epargyreus clarus. Show all posts

Thursday, June 18, 2015

Bugs, Bugs, and More Bugs!

The butterflies are becoming more abundant lately. There are lots of nectar-producing flowers blooming now, so tons of food. Over the weekend I managed to get photos of two more butterfly species: Epargyreus clarus (silver-spotted skipper), and Phyciodes cocyta (? sometimes it is difficult to tell apart species in this genus but I think it's Phyciodes cocyta based on what appears to be an orange tip on the antennal club, which is apparently a distinguishing feature of this species [1]), the northern crescent.

Phyciodes cocyta (?)
Both of these species are native to North America. Phyciodes cocyta is one of Canada's most abundant butterflies in its range [1].

Phyciodes cocyta (?)
Epargyreus clarus is Canada's largest skipper [2], being about as big as a monarch or tiger swallowtail. It is not particularly abundant [2], so I was lucky to have run into a group of them (there were four that I saw in a few minutes). This species can be somewhat colonial [2], so it's unsurprising that there were a reasonable number of them in the same area.

Epargyreus clarus - collecting nectar from Vicia cracca
I also managed to get a very nice shot of a ladybug, which I believe is Coccinella septempunctata (seven-spotted ladybug), a species native to Europe but which has been repeatedly and extensively introduced in North America as pest control against aphids [3].

Coccinella septempunctata