Silver-washed Fritillary form valezina
Unlike the typical form valezina is quite well camouflaged on flowering brambles
The upperwing, depending on the light, looks to have either a greenish or bluish sheen. The underwing is supposed to be green and dusky pink but I couldn't see any pink on this individual
A male of the usual colour ( all valezina types are female). Males don't find the valezina form as attractive as the normal form which keeps their numbers low even though the gene causing the colour difference is apparently a dominant one. We watched her for well over an hour and several males passed close by her but didn't seem to even notice her....
...like this one, he only stayed a second or two and didn't pay her any attention.
Another view of the beautiful underwing, shame she's got her head behind a bramble hiding her buggy face!
Isn't she lovely?
Purple Hairstreak ( male) on Alder Buckthorn
He even showed off his supreme purpleiness!
A photo of Sneezewort... for no reason other than because I like it.
Not at Alners Gorse but seen yesterday whilst not seeing White-letter Hairstreak somewhere else. I saw these, what I assume to be moth eggs of some sort. There are around sixty of them and twenty-five have hatched. At the top of the leaf you can see the tiny new caterpillars huddled together, although one brave individual on the right is branching out on its own!
Closer but blurrier view. Anyone have any idea what they might be?
1 comment:
Super shots Karen of the valezina form ... still waiting to find one on my local patch.
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