Brookside Gardens Wings of Fancy – Part II
/Continuing the post about our photography session at Brookside’s Wings of Fancy…..
The starry cracker looked like its name. I’ll remember this one from now on.
Now for two very similar butterflies. The first one is (probably) a ‘batwing’ from Asia – a red fuzzy body.
This one also has black wings and red on its body but it also has swallowtail-like lobes on the ends of its wings. It’s a Pink Rose and is native to the Philippines.
The malachite is a butterfly I’ve known about for several years from the Brookside exhibit. It is from Central and South America. Several of these images were against the glass wall of the conservatory. I liked the way the lights from outside highlighted the pattern of the wings.
The paper kite butterflies are large butterflies that seem to have extra flexion points in their wings. They flutter! It’s an Asian butterfly and well represented in butterfly houses around the world.
There were a few Monarch butterflies in the exhibit. I anticipate taking lots of Monarch pictures as my caterpillar(s) mature so I’ve only included on here.
The golden helicon is aptly named – note the gold tipped antennae.
The buckeye is surprisingly colorful upon close inspection. The powdery look on the wings makes it easy to imagine the scale structure that would be visible at higher magnification (and trauma to the butterfly). The wings were battered on this specimen. It is a butterfly I might see in Maryland!
The pipevine swallowtail is another than I might see where I live.
The next one is some other kind of swallowtail although the ‘tails’ are broader than we see on our local swallowtails. I thought the butterfly looked like it was yearning to be outdoors – even in the rain!
The brown tip is another one I’d seen before. When I found it on Wikipedia (Siproeta epaphus), I realized that there was considerable variability within the species so the link I provided for this one is to a more specific butterfly site.
The banded orange butterfly looks like its name – both from dorsal and ventral views. I like the ventral ones the best.
The butterfly with the orange dots is a male Grecian shoemaker. The female looks very different. It is from Central and South America…not sure why it is named the way it is.
A battered zebra mosaic butterfly – enjoying a banana. Even the body is patterned!
The leopard lacewing is another butterfly that has complex markings on the underside of the wing.
The golden birdwing is a butterfly in near constant motion. It flutters while it fees on flower – not resting it’s weight on the flower – hence the motions blurs.
The ruby-spotted swallowtail classification is a bit confusing. I found two references as seem to be conflicting but both look like the butterfly I photographed: Wikipedia’s Papilio anchisiades and Butterflies of America’s Heraclides anchisades. The common name is ‘ruby-spotted swallowtail’ in both cases.
I enjoyed the Focus on Butterflies session so much that I won’t mind doing it again this season. The call for volunteers to help with the exhibit is still on the Brookside web site so I signed for the next available training (in early June) and will volunteer thereafter. The exhibit continues until mid-September.