Some kind of dark form female? Grey eye like Atlantis...or hybrid of some kind?
Funky dark form.
A note to anyone editing data quality or annotations: This specimen was alive when I collected it, and the data given reflect the time and place when the insect was observed alive.
Please adhere to iNat’s guidelines and do not mark this observation as “captive” or “dead”, as this causes problems for researchers attempting to find species records.
iNat's definition of a "wild" observation explicitly includes "your museum/herbarium specimens that are appropriately marked with date and location of original collection". The data given are the date and location of original capture, and as such, this observation should not be marked as captive. See #5 of the observation FAQ on the forum: https://www.inaturalist.org/pages/help#captive
The "dead" annotation should only be used if the organism was dead at the time of the observation. The question of insect specimen annotations has been had on the forums, and specimens which are dead in the photo but were alive at the time of capture should be annotated as "alive", not "dead". See here for discussion:
https://forum.inaturalist.org/t/annotate-dead-or-alive/17537
Thanks!
I know this is not the dark morph female tiger swallowtail but how does one tell the difference between a female black swallowtail and an Ozark swallowtail?
Photo 1- Note the Desert Black Swallowtail larvae dropped by the Scrub-Jay, which is about to be eaten.
Photos 2 & 3- Eating the larvae, including banging it against the boulder.
Photo 4- Back with another larvae, tucked under its left foot.
Photo 5- Back a third time to the Turpentine Broom, which is the host plant of the Desert Black Swallowtail.
Photo 6- Gotcha!
Injured
Solar eclipse totality c. 3:25 PM
Bat foraging ......at least from 5:15 PM through 5:50 PM ... to ?
during which the bat rested on the roof a few times.
major surprise to see this little bird foraging in the yard today
A mutant mandarin swallowtail. Not sure what kind of mutant yet. gynandromorphic?
I've seen these exquisitely, tastefully beautiful brush-footed butterflies dining on road-kill before, but its always a little surreal. Apparently, the "four-footed" Satyrinae also dislike sunlight. They combine the very familiar with the very alien, and expand the mental image of Butterflies in a weird direction.
I believe this is a female, based on comparing pictures of the shapes of the wings - the forewing seems shorter and rounder than in the male. This lovely butterfly is not at all interested in flowers. It is indeed feeding on a dead Raccoon carcass, with its proboscis between the fangs like a dental instrument. The Raccoon was laying in the weeds just beyond a place where visitors to the public Game Lands can park a few cars, which is a little strange as well. Perhaps the male raccoon was tossed there after it was accidently killed on the road. This did not strike me as a perfectly natural scene in any case.
The setting was a small stream valley in the Allegheny Plateau, elevation around 328 meters (1076 feet), surrounded by approximately equal amounts of mixed deciduous second growth woodland and small farms.
69* F. sunny. Gravel road. A lot of wing waving & twirling in place. (Newly emerged?)
It flew before could capture the amazing blue of the dorsal side of the wings.
Mating pair
leucistic Eastern Black Swallowtail butterfly
Stills from a video.
On Tim's Trail at the Helen W. Buckner Preserve at Bald Mountain
Going by the neck spots here. The forewing apex is bizarre.
Nectaring on Spreading Dogbane. Although available here on iNaturalist as a subspecies, I understand that "Kahli" Swallowtail is a Black X Old-World hybrid/intergrade. I do not know if iNat allows it to be identified as such.
Over 100 Northern Pearly-eyes sipping secretions on a distressed American Elm, largely defoliated by Gypsy Moth caterpillars.
w/ Chris Cheatle
Thousands of them mudpuddling along the road at various wet spots and in sedges.
White Red-necked |Grebe on nest
Un macho que acaba de eclosionar en mi jardín. Su coloración y marcas son muy extrañas. Las alas de abajo no funcionan y no puede volar.
Northern Crescent mating with Hobomok Skipper
rare au Québec, pour moi c'est mon deuxième en Gaspésie, le premier remonte à dix neuf ans
Une soixantaine d'amiral en train de s'abreuver au même endroit
Photo 15-8915 Blue (dorsal); ph 8911 (ventral)
Hay Island (ile aux Foins) in Neguac - a reliable spot to see this swallowtail.
Mourning Cloak
Many nearby
Le pelage de l'Écureuil gris de l'Est (Sciurus carolinensis) peut être de deux couleurs, le gris et le noir, ce qui porte les gens à croire (par erreur) qu'il s'agit de deux espèces distinctes. Le noir est souvent la couleur dominante dans le nord de l'aire de répartition de l'espèce, en Ontario et au Québec. Plus au sud, le noir est moins fréquent, et il ne se trouve aucun écureuil noir dans le Sud des États-Unis. Cela porte à croire que le gène de la pigmentation noire traduit une adaptation aux basses températures. Il existe également des écureuils gris de l'Est albinos; aux États-Unis, on a observé de petites populations dâindividus entièrement blancs. Il existe, quoique rarement, une variante de couleur rousse; certains individus ont un pelage bicolore, par exemple, un corps noir avec une queue rousse. / Eastern grey squirrels Sciurus carolinensis commonly occur in two colour phases, grey and black, which leads people to think—mistakenly—that there are two different species. Black is often the dominant colour in Ontario and Quebec, toward the northern limits of the species’ range. Farther south the black phase is less common and is not found at all in the southern United States. This may indicate that the gene responsible for black coloration has some cold-weather adaptation associated with it. Albino eastern grey squirrels also occur and in the United States a few small, completely white populations are found. There are rare instances of a reddish colour phase and some animals may also have a combination of colours, for example a black body with a red tail. https://www.hww.ca/en/wildlife/mammals/eastern-grey-squirrel.html#sid2
On the Old Orchard Loop at Heaven Hill: https://wildadirondacks.org/heaven-hill-trails.html
hunting from nearby tree, about 10:30am, looking intently down at snow, then landed and mantled for a couple of minutes, burying its head into the snow several times before flying off in the opposite direction
Kaibab Swallowtail Butterfly Roaring Springs,GRCA, AZ, May 15, 1987, R.J. Skalski
Grand Canyon Museum Collection
2 Albright Ave, Grand Canyon Village, AZ 86023
Phone: (928) 638-7769
https://www.nps.gov/grca/learn/historyculture/muscol.htm
Nesting in weep holes in retaining wall on western shore of Edinboro Lake.