Help with mountain species please
- Chris Jackson
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- Location: Marseilles, France
Help with mountain species please
Hi Folks,
Today, in the Savoie départment in the French Alps, on the Pointe de la Masse near the Les Menuires resort, I saw this Erebia at 2800 m altitude :
I only got its uppersides :
Photo 1 context : However, very close by I got the underside of 2 other individuals :
Photo 2 ( 2800 m ) Photo 3 ( 2800 m ) (they were all flying in proximity to Peak White also at 2800 m) Going back down the mountain I also saw this individual at 2100 m alt.:
Photo 4 uppers Photo 5 unders is it E. euryale ?
And can we confirm that this is Coenonympha gardetta at 2212 m altitude ?
Photo 6 Thanks,
Chris
Today, in the Savoie départment in the French Alps, on the Pointe de la Masse near the Les Menuires resort, I saw this Erebia at 2800 m altitude :
I only got its uppersides :
Photo 1 context : However, very close by I got the underside of 2 other individuals :
Photo 2 ( 2800 m ) Photo 3 ( 2800 m ) (they were all flying in proximity to Peak White also at 2800 m) Going back down the mountain I also saw this individual at 2100 m alt.:
Photo 4 uppers Photo 5 unders is it E. euryale ?
And can we confirm that this is Coenonympha gardetta at 2212 m altitude ?
Photo 6 Thanks,
Chris
- Roger Gibbons
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Re: Help with mountain species please
I think your Erebia are gorge (Silky) and euryale. Great find to get gorge in France - I've only ever seen it in CH. Your male Peak White is also a great find, it would be even more so if a reclusive female.
Roger
Roger
- Chris Jackson
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Re: Help with mountain species please
Thank you Roger,
The Silky Ringlet is a lifer for me, whereas I had glimpsed a Peak White with no photo last year in Switzerland with Guy, so this has brought me now officially into the Peak White club.
I will have some other mountain species coming up for confirmation if I may.
Cheers,
Chris
The Silky Ringlet is a lifer for me, whereas I had glimpsed a Peak White with no photo last year in Switzerland with Guy, so this has brought me now officially into the Peak White club.
I will have some other mountain species coming up for confirmation if I may.
Cheers,
Chris
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Re: Help with mountain species please
Hi Chris
Your photo no 6 is for sure a gardetta
Your photo no 6 is for sure a gardetta
- Chris Jackson
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Re: Help with mountain species please
Thank you John
That is a comfort.
Any opinion on my Boloria further down would be welcome.
Chris
That is a comfort.
Any opinion on my Boloria further down would be welcome.
Chris
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Re: Help with mountain species please
Hi Chris
I can´t no longer find your post about the Boloria, but before it "disappeared" I copied your pictures to my laptop I have now examined your pictures and I am quit sure that is it a B. napaea
BR
john
I can´t no longer find your post about the Boloria, but before it "disappeared" I copied your pictures to my laptop I have now examined your pictures and I am quit sure that is it a B. napaea
BR
john
- Chris Jackson
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Re: Help with mountain species please
Thank you John,
I find that the characteristics given in the different ID books for B. pales and B. napaea are not clear. There does not seem to be an easy and foolproof ID method.
Remember, this is in the Savoie département (French post code 73).
These were probably the photos I posted:
2300 m altitude, Val Thorens ski resort
Male same Male 2140 m altitude, Les Menuires ski resort
Female same female Chris
I find that the characteristics given in the different ID books for B. pales and B. napaea are not clear. There does not seem to be an easy and foolproof ID method.
Remember, this is in the Savoie département (French post code 73).
These were probably the photos I posted:
2300 m altitude, Val Thorens ski resort
Male same Male 2140 m altitude, Les Menuires ski resort
Female same female Chris
Last edited by Chris Jackson on Fri Jul 21, 2017 4:53 pm, edited 5 times in total.
- Paul Wetton
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Re: Help with mountain species please
To provoke a bit more interest in these difficult to ID species I thought they may have both been males and that the first could have been Shepherd's with the light markings and more unparallel spots on the upper forewing whilst the second could be Mountain Fritillary with thicker markings and slightly more parallel lines of spots on the upper forewings. I'm likely to be completely wrong here having not seen these species for several years now.
Cheers Paul
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Re: Help with mountain species please
Hi Chris
Yes the first two pictures was the one I saw, I havn´t seen the last two, but for me it is a clear B.graeca because of the complete row af brown ringed eye-spot on the hindwing.
Yes the first two pictures was the one I saw, I havn´t seen the last two, but for me it is a clear B.graeca because of the complete row af brown ringed eye-spot on the hindwing.
- Chris Jackson
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Re: Help with mountain species please
Hi Paul,Paul Wetton wrote:To provoke a bit more interest in these difficult to ID species I thought they may have both been males and that the first could have been Shepherd's with the light markings and more unparallel spots on the upper forewing whilst the second could be Mountain Fritillary with thicker markings and slightly more parallel lines of spots on the upper forewings ....
Thanks for your input. A tricky question these Boloria sp.. Frankly, the illustrations in the Collins butterfly guide are not representative of what I see in the field (or on the mountain) in France. The photos in 'Papillons de France' by T. Lafranchis are a lot closer to reality as to the difference between male and female, but still leave me in some doubt as to the difference between B. pales and B. napaea.
The markings are lighter on the male and bolder on the female.
As to whether the rows of spots are less parallel or more unparallel between the 2 species, I lack the discerning eye of the artist.
Any other opinions as to these views ?
Male ? Boloria pales / napaea Female ? Boloria pales / napaea
- Chris Jackson
- Posts: 1929
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Re: Help with mountain species please
Thanks John,John Vergo wrote: ... for me it is a clear B.graeca because of the complete row of brown ringed eye-spot on the hindwing.
I was in the Savoie département (73) in France.
B. graeca is not usually spotted in this département so I am a little wary.
It is true as well that with the Boloria sp., all the markings are so variable and I am relatively inexperienced with altitude species, so I hesitate moving away from present trends and sightings.
Having said this, with my photos I would like to contribute to and enlarge any existing knowledge.
I may leave these photos classed as Boloria sp. for the moment
Cheers, Chris
- Tony Moore
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Re: Help with mountain species please
Is not the hw angle is too obtuse for graeca?
Tony M.
Tony M.
- Roger Gibbons
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Re: Help with mountain species please
A while ago I wrote an article for the EIG Newsletter which might be useful, pages 14-19:
http://www.bc-eig.org.uk/downloads/EIG16.pdf
In principle, the markings of napaea are thinner and more delicate than those of pales.
The distribution of graeca is given here:
http://diatheo.weebly.com/boloria-graeca.html
It's highly unlikely to be graeca in mid-Savoie as Chris says.
I have just seen five graeca in two different places in the Mercantour, none which had the decency to sit still for a photo.
Roger
http://www.bc-eig.org.uk/downloads/EIG16.pdf
In principle, the markings of napaea are thinner and more delicate than those of pales.
The distribution of graeca is given here:
http://diatheo.weebly.com/boloria-graeca.html
It's highly unlikely to be graeca in mid-Savoie as Chris says.
I have just seen five graeca in two different places in the Mercantour, none which had the decency to sit still for a photo.
Roger
- Chris Jackson
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- Location: Marseilles, France
Re: Help with mountain species please
Hi Tony,
and thanks Roger for the link to your article which is quite precise and well explained.
So, when I look back at my 2 photos above, the first thing I note (which now is obvious), is that the length of the abdomen in both photos is the same and extends to the edge of the hind wing = both photos are of males !! (I should have spotted that - beginners stuff ).
With the first male the markings are finer, the offset between the black spots in s3 and s4 is more pronounced and the two rows of black spots do seem to converge towards the apex = B. pales ?
With the second male the markings are bolder, the offset between the black spots in s3 and s4 is less pronounced and the two rows of black spots seem to remain more parallel = B. napaea ?
Having said that, my photos of the undersides seem to show completely the opposite of the characteristics in Roger's photos.
Here are 2 other photos from a different place, from a known pass in the Mercantour at 2360 m. The photos are from the same location at a 10 minute interval - supposedly belonging to the same colony. Clearly male and female.
Male B. pales Female B. pales Chris
and thanks Roger for the link to your article which is quite precise and well explained.
So, when I look back at my 2 photos above, the first thing I note (which now is obvious), is that the length of the abdomen in both photos is the same and extends to the edge of the hind wing = both photos are of males !! (I should have spotted that - beginners stuff ).
With the first male the markings are finer, the offset between the black spots in s3 and s4 is more pronounced and the two rows of black spots do seem to converge towards the apex = B. pales ?
With the second male the markings are bolder, the offset between the black spots in s3 and s4 is less pronounced and the two rows of black spots seem to remain more parallel = B. napaea ?
Having said that, my photos of the undersides seem to show completely the opposite of the characteristics in Roger's photos.
Here are 2 other photos from a different place, from a known pass in the Mercantour at 2360 m. The photos are from the same location at a 10 minute interval - supposedly belonging to the same colony. Clearly male and female.
Male B. pales Female B. pales Chris
- Padfield
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Re: Help with mountain species please
Hi Chris. All the pictures I see here are pales (in MHO). I simply don't understand the Lafranchis thing about parallel or non-parallel and have never found it any use in practice. As you know, both species fly in Switzerland and although I've never found a place with only napaea (females being the give-away) I do know places with only pales (unless they are special colonies with no females). I've seen a huge range in the appearance of male pales but the position of the spot in s.2 and the shape of some of the other spots is relatively consistent, even when the linearity/macularity varies. There are supposed to be features on the underside that distinguish them too but I've never really got these to work, again because of the huge variation in pales.
Guy
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- Chris Jackson
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Re: Help with mountain species please
Thank you Guy,
I will reflect on the information I have received regarding Boloria pales / napaea, and will no doubt get my photos out during the autumn/winter for a closer look.
Chris
I will reflect on the information I have received regarding Boloria pales / napaea, and will no doubt get my photos out during the autumn/winter for a closer look.
Chris