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Friday, October 18, 2013

In the pumpkin patch

We were wandering through a local pumpkin patch, looking for orange among the greenery, when these much smaller orange spots appeared:


California Sisters (Adelpha bredowii californica) are more commonly associated with oak woodlands, so these butterflies don't show up on Bodega Head very often.  These photographs were taken in Sebastopol on 18 October 2013.

Not only are there dramatic orange spots at the tips of the forewings, but note the smaller orange spots at the inside corners of the hindwings, the orange eyes, and the orange proboscis (see below)!  The color scheme is a good match for a pumpkin patch in October!


P.S.  I was wondering why these butterflies are called "sisters."  It sounds like the genus is known for those strong white stripes running across the dark wings, a pattern which reminded someone of a nun's habit.

1 comment:

. said...

Thank you very much for identifying this butterfly and providing some context. I just came back from the Los Padres National Forest where there were many of these and I Google searched the photo to find your site. Much appreciated.