A few from the A.C.T. and the Snowies

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moloch05

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Hello all,

I will start off with a word of warning. Most of the following shots are of non-herps!

Last weekend, I headed south to Canberra to visit my son. He had to work until about 2pm so I spent the morning on Mt. Ainslie, a small hill on the edge of town. This was a great place for butterflies. There were many species at the hilltop and a "swarm" of 20-30 butterflies constantly chased each other over the forest canopy. Red-spotted Jezebels (Delias aganippe) were the most common butterfly in the swarm but there were also a few Imperial Jezebels (D. harpalyce), one Scarlet Jezebel (D. argenthona), many Glasswings (Acraea andromacha), one Blue Triangle (Graphium sarpedon), a few Dainty Swallowtails (Papilio anactus) and a single lovely Tailed Emperor (Polyura sempronius).

I also found a number of butterflies that visited the flowers of an ornamental bottlebrush (Callistemon sp.). Some of the canopy swarm would occasionally drop to the flowers and feed for a few seconds before heading back up to continue with the chase. Browns of several species were numerous in the grassy forest floor. Some of these and various species of lycaenids would also visit the flowers.


Here is a shot of Mt. Ainslie in the late afternoon:
Canberra4.jpg



Here are a couple of shots of the habitat at the summit of Mt. Ainslie. The forest here is mostly composed of several species of Eucalyptus and wattles (Acacia sp.).
habitat10.jpg



... and views of Canberra from the lookout at the summit of Mt. Ainslie early in the morning:
Canberra2.jpg



A shot of the political centre of Australia:
habitat11.jpg



The trees at the summit were not big. This is the area where a large mixed-species swarm of butterflies raced back and forth once the day was warm. They usually remained above the canopy but sometimes would drop lower and fly along the road.
habitat9.jpg



I tried to take a photo of the flock but they were always too fast for me. I did manage this shot of a Red-spotted Jezebel that was in pursuit of a Blue Triangle. When I first saw Red-spotted Jezebels last year in the desert near Bourke, I thought that they were a slow flying species. Here on the summit, however, they were speedsters and they chased each other as well as other species of butterflies that joined in the swarm. I saw several more species of butterflies in the swarm on this second visit. New additions included a Macleay's Swallowtail, a Chequered Swallowtail, and surprisingly, a few Common Browns and Marbled Xenicas. The latter two normally flit around the forest floor so it seemed odd to see them flying high above the canopy with the other butterflies.
swarm1.jpg



Tailed Emperor (Polyura sempronius) -- our one and only Polyura. There were two of these at the summit. They would chase the other butterflies for awhile and then settle on leaves 3m or so up in the trees.
TailedEmperor1a.jpg



Red-spotted Jezebels (Delias aganippe) were the dominant species in the mixed-species flock. They were colourful butterflies but unfortunately uncooperative for photos. I usually saw them in flight although this one was warming itself early in the morning near the top of a Eucalyptus.
Red-spottedJezebelDeliasaganippe.jpg



Imperial Hairstreak (Jalmenus evagoras). There were several of these at the flowers of the Callistemon.
ImperialHairstreak1.jpg

ImperialHairstreak3Jalmenusevagoras.jpg

ImperialHairstreak8Jalmenusevagoras.jpg

ImperialHairstreak7aJalmenusevagoras.jpg





Glasswings (Acraea andromacha) were abundant:
Glasswing2Acraeaandromacha.jpg

Glasswing1Acraeaandromacha.jpg

Glasswing4Acraeaandromacha.jpg



Imperial Jezebel (Delias harpalyce). Unfortunately, the other jezebels only stopped briefly at the flowers and I was not able to take any photos of these at all.
ImperialJezebel1.jpg


... when the day became warm, they left the mixed-species flock and settled high up in the canopy.
ImperialJezebel2-1.jpg



A fresh-looking Bronze Flat (Netrocoryne repanda):
BronzeFlat1.jpg



Varied Dusky-Blue (Candalides hyacinthina)
VariedDusky-Blue1aCandalideshyacinthina.jpg



Saltbush Blue (Theclinesthes serpentata).
blue5.jpg
.
blue3.jpg

blue4.jpg



One of my favourites was the Chequered Copper (Lucia limbaria)
ChequeredCopper8Lucialimbaria.jpg

ChequeredCopper9aLucialimbaria.jpg

ChequeredCopper10Lucialimbaria.jpg



Dainty Swallowtail (Papilio anactus):
DaintySwallowtail.jpg

DaintySwallowtail3Papilioanactus.jpg



This is what I think to be a Wide-brand Grass-Dart (Suniana sunias)
Wide-brandGrass-Dart1Sunianasunias.jpg

Wide-brandGrass-Dart2Sunianasunias.jpg




Two-spotted Line-Blue (Nacaduba biocellata):
Two-spottedLine-Blue1Nacadubabiocellata.jpg



Amethyst Hairstreaks (Jalmenus icilius), a wattle specialist.
WattleBlue3Theclinesthesmiskini.jpg

WattleBlue2Theclinesthesmiskini.jpg

WattleBlue4Theclinesthesmiskini.jpg

WattleBlue5Theclinesthesmiskini.jpg



Shouldered Brown (Heteronympha penelope):
ShoulderedBrown4aHeteronymphapenelope.jpg

ShoulderedBrown5Heteronymphapenelope.jpg



Australian Painted Lady (Vanessa kershawi)
PaintedLadyVanessakershawi2.jpg



Meadow Argus (Junonia villida):
MeadowArgus2.jpg




"Gippsland" form of the Eastern Water Dragon:
... adult male:
WaterDragon1.jpg


... females or imm males:
WaterDragon3.jpg

WaterDragon4.jpg

WaterDragon2.jpg




Once my son was finished with his work, we headed south to the Snowy Mountains. We camped along a river between the ski towns of Jindabyne and Threadbo. The elevation here was about 1200m. Saturday afternoon was sunny but a change unfortunately arrived overnight. Temps remained warm but the skies were grey with frequent rain on Sunday.

This are had been burned by a bush fire a number of years ago. Trees were regenerating but the hillsides were covered with the skeletons of trees that were killed by the fire.
habitat6.jpg

habitat7.jpg

habitat3.jpg

habitat1.jpg



Grassy areas like these were full of Shouldered Browns (Heteronympha penelope) and Marbled Xenicas (Geitoneura klugii)
habitat8.jpg

habitat5.jpg



Walking track that we followed near our campground.
habitat4.jpg



A new butterfly to me was the Silver Xenica (Oreixenica lathoniella). These are small but nicely marked members of Satyrinae.
SilverXenica1Oreixenicalathoniella.jpg

SilverXenica2Oreixenicalathoniella.jpg

SilverXenica4Oreixenicalathoniella.jpg



Shouldered Browns (Heteronympha penelope) were abundant.
ShoulderedBrown1Heteronymphapenelope.jpg



... typical view of one perched on a stem of grass. It was hard to find one that was not obscured by vegetation when resting.
ShoulderedBrown2Heteronymphapenelope.jpg



... under surface:
ShoulderedBrown3Heteronymphapenelope.jpg




Marbled Xenica (Geitoneura klugii) were abundant along the trail.
MarbledXenica2.jpg



Bark of a Snow Gum:
SnowGum1.jpg



Here is another one that I cannot identify for certain. I could not get a good shot of the outer underwings but these were spotted with large patches of white. To me, it looks much like a Mottled Grass-Skipper (Anisynta cynone), a species with a fragmented distribution that is known from northern NSW but not from the ACT. I suppose that it must be something else but I am not certain of its identification.
skipper1.jpg



This beetle looked amazing with its huge antennae.
beetle1.jpg



Gang-Gang Cockatoo, male:
Ganggang1.jpg


female:
Ganggang2.jpg



flower_daisy3.jpg


flower_daisy2.jpg

flower_daisy1_400.jpg
flower_daisy1a_400.jpg



Here is a lovely but unresponsive Highland Copperhead (Austrelaps ramsayi) that I found basking along a trail in the afternoon.
Copperhead2.jpg


... watching me before racing into cover:
Copperhead1.jpg



One of the very common skinks. I think that these were Tussock Skinks (Pseudemoia entrecasteauxi) but I am not certain:
Pseudemoia1.jpg



... that is it for this trip. It was great to have a night in the hills with my son. We did not get for the big bushwalk on Sunday due to the weather but we still had a good time exploring the area.
 
Awesome photos mate love the gang gang and also the dainty swallowtail gotta love a good butterfly swarm:p
 
Everytime I see your threads moloch, the quality of the butterfly pics just blows me away!! If i took one picture like that I'd be proud!!! Good on ya!
 
Thanks very much for the feedback.

KT,
I use a Canon 40D body with a Tamron 180mm macro. Almost all of the shots were with an external flash set to second curtin (flash fill).

Regards,
David
 
absolutely stunning photos

really loved the butterflies

thank you for sharing them
 
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