Daily Quiz

This is a forum for, primarily, monthly (or so!) photographic competitions that complement the annual competition.
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Mikhail
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Re: Daily Quiz

Post by Mikhail »

No Guy, I'm not that devious. It's lepidopterous. Characteristic feeding damage of a honeysuckle feeder.

Misha
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Dave McCormick
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Re: Daily Quiz

Post by Dave McCormick »

could it be 20 plume moth? Or something larger?
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Mikhail
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Re: Daily Quiz

Post by Mikhail »

Small caterpillar of something larger!

Misha
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m_galathea
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Re: Daily Quiz

Post by m_galathea »

I think it is one of the bee hawk moths. I'll go for broad-bordered.

Alexander
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xmilehigh
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Re: Daily Quiz

Post by xmilehigh »

Hi,

How about a Broad-bordered Bee Hawk-moth larva :?:

Pipped at the post !!
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Mikhail
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Re: Daily Quiz

Post by Mikhail »

Both of you spot on. Well done. Here's a picture showing the underside of a leaf with the culprit and an unhatched egg. Over to you Alexander.
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m_galathea
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Re: Daily Quiz

Post by m_galathea »

How well do you know your eye-spots? I suspect these four shouldn't be too difficult:
eyespots.JPG
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Padfield
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Re: Daily Quiz

Post by Padfield »

Mmm... I'm very uncertain about the fourth one, but going clockwise from top left I propose:

Grayling
Ringlet
Meadow brown
Large heath

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m_galathea
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Re: Daily Quiz

Post by m_galathea »

I knew the last one would be hardest, but still too easy for you Guy.
eyes 2.JPG
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Padfield
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Re: Daily Quiz

Post by Padfield »

Aha!! But I really wasn't sure. :D

Continuing on the 'four-eyes' theme, here are four (British) fritillaries to identify, all photographed this year in my new home village of Huémoz. It would probably be more fun to try first without looking at a book. :D

Image
Image
Image
Image

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Pete Eeles
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Re: Daily Quiz

Post by Pete Eeles »

OK - without looking at a book :)

Pearl-bordered
High Brown
Silver-washed
Glanville

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Padfield
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Re: Daily Quiz

Post by Padfield »

Spot on Pete!

Over to you!

(I'll append the complete originals later, as I've got a bus to catch now)

Guy

Here are those originals:

Image
Image
Image
Image

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Pete Eeles
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Re: Daily Quiz

Post by Pete Eeles »

The scientific name for the Grizzled Skipper is Pyrgus malvae.

Why is this misleading?

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Padfield
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Re: Daily Quiz

Post by Padfield »

Pete, can you offer bonus marks to anyone who can explain how it came to have this misleading name?! I've long wondered, especially as the French name for the butterfly is l'hespérie de la mauve.

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Pete Eeles
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Re: Daily Quiz

Post by Pete Eeles »

padfield wrote:Pete, can you offer bonus marks to anyone who can explain how it came to have this misleading name?! I've long wondered, especially as the French name for the butterfly is l'hespérie de la mauve.

Guy
No marks - only kudos. But "yes", mucho kudos for anyone explaining that too :)

BTW - I prefer the French name!

Cheers,

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Dave McCormick
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Re: Daily Quiz

Post by Dave McCormick »

Pete Eeles wrote:The scientific name for the Grizzled Skipper is Pyrgus malvae.

Why is this misleading?

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- Pete
Is it because in the book "Faerie Wars" the Pyrgus Malvae is the son of Apatura Iris (Purple Emperor)? All I can come up with
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m_galathea
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Re: Daily Quiz

Post by m_galathea »

Does the Grizzled Skipper not ever eat Mallow as malvae suggests?
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Pete Eeles
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Re: Daily Quiz

Post by Pete Eeles »

Nice try, Dave.

But well done Alexander - spot on.

As for Guy's related question - when Linnaeus was swanning around naming everything in sight, Grizzled Skipper seemed to be closely-related to a whole bunch of species that do feed on mallow. At least, that's what Maitland Emmet's "The Scientific Names of the British Lepidoptera" suggests.

Anyway, over to you Alexander!

Cheers,

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Padfield
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Re: Daily Quiz

Post by Padfield »

On a related note, Thecla betulae is not commonly found using birch as a foodplant, though I believe it can take it. The French name for that is 'La thécla du bouleau', which also literally means 'the Thecla of the birch'.

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m_galathea
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Re: Daily Quiz

Post by m_galathea »

...another example of wikipedia giving out crap info (see Malva).

Ok, Clouded Yellow males (but not females) have structures on their wings used in mate selection which reflect which wavelenths of light?
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