Showing posts with label Common Baskettail. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Common Baskettail. Show all posts

Monday, July 04, 2016

... and things with Wings

.. other things with wings often don't become obvious until morning birding has finished. I have had even less time to shorten focus onto the insects than I have had for morning birding. But there have been some.

(Caveat - please jump in if you think butterflies or dragonflies have been mis-ID'd.

From Putney Wetlands on May 30 - Eastern Least Clubtail and Common Baskettail ...

Eastern Least Clubtail

Common Baskettail

From Somerset June 30 -  White Admiral and Red-spotted Purple look distinctly different, but are actually the same species - Limenitis Arthemis. White Admirals were common. The second photo below is an intergrade between the two forms of the species ...

White Admiral

Intergrade between White Admiral and Red-spotted Purple
Red-spotted Purple - Philadelphia, 8/29/12


Additional photos from Somerset, June 30 ...

Chalf-fronted Corporal - male

Chalk-fronted Corporal - female
Elegant Spreadwing (?)

Common Whitetail - female
Enjoy the Outdoors!

Beaver Pond along Forest Route 71, Somerset, VT

Tuesday, June 09, 2015

and Things with Wings

About the time that the birds stop singing, the dragonflies start flying. These fascinating little creatures are a relatively new pursuit for me, so it often takes time to figure out what I have seen and photographed. Which is okay by my, because at heart I am a researcher ... a pager of books and puzzle solver.

An added benefit of this sometimes perplexing quest for a name and ID, is the opportunity to study the photographs and pause to appreciate the beauty and variety of the creatures.

On two different visits to the Wilson Wetlands in Putney, the Beaverpond Clubtail was flying. The second visit yielded these photos ...

Beaverpond Clubtail

Beaverpond Clubtail
Chalk-fronted Corporal was flying at beaverponds in large numbers in Somerset in the Green Mountain NF and at Wilson's Wetlands in Putney. The first 2 photos are from Somerset, the 3rd from Putney ...

Chalk-fronted Corporal - female

Chalk-fronted Corporal - male (on guard duty)

Chalk-fronted Corporal
On a sunny afternoon in the backyard, this Common Baskettail landed on my pant leg. Panic ! ... no camera. But not to worry, the iPad has a reasonably good camera. The photo even shows the male appendage, which I was later able to examine with a magnifying glass. The 2nd photo was taken at the Rutland Marsh ...

Common Baskettail

Common Baskettail
Photographing dragonflies with a 400mm lens can present challenges, but when the photos are sharp, they reveal a beauty which can't be seen with the naked eye. That was experience with the next 3 photos. The first is a Dot-tailed Whiteface at Wilson's Wetlands ...

Dot-tailed Whiteface
Along the forest service road in Somerset (near the big beaver pond/wetlands, for SE Vermont folk who may be looking at this), was this Frosted Whiteface female ...

Frosted Whiteface female

Frosted Whiteface female
Damselflies are so small as to be almost a figment of the imagination. Nevertheless, at the same location where I saw the Frosted Whiteface was a virtual swarm of Northern Bluets, including this one which paused briefly ...

Northern Bluet
And finally, a disclaimer. I am quite confident about the IDs on these insects, but I am new to this. If you think I may have mis-IDed, don't hesitate to raise the question.

Saturday, August 10, 2013

Things with Wings - 2

This is a continuation of my post on August 6. Dragonflies have gotten my attention this summer. Here are a few, beginning with one in the Emerald family.

First, Common Baskettail - Epitheca cynosura 1.6" - (although I have not completely ruled out identifying it as a Mantled Baskettail).

Common Baskettail
I am more certain about the next ID -  a member of the Cruiser family:

Illinois River Cruiser, aka Swift River Cruiser - Macromia illinoiensis 2.8"

Illinois River Cruiser
Continuing with the first post in this series, three representatives from the Skimmer family.

I have encountered the White-faced Meadowhawk - Sympetrum obtrusum, 1.3" - in several locations around Windham County: the Green Mountains near Somerset Resevoir, the fields near Putney ( Wilson) Wetlands, and in the field near my home close to the Rock River. Small, but brilliantly colored:

White-faced Meadowhawk - male
White-faced Meadowhawk - female
White-faced Meadowhawk - female
Close in appearance when first spotted is the Band-winged Meadowhawk - Sympetrum semicinctum, 1.3 -  but with distinctive transparent amber patch in the hindwing, seen when at rest ...

Band-winged Meadowhawk - male
 The amber patch in not so apparent in the next photo, but I remember seeing it clearly when in the field ...

Band-winged Meadowhawk - male

Thursday, May 23, 2013

Worm-eating & Prothonotary

From last week's birding in southern New Jersey, a few additional images ... Worm-eating Warbler, Bellplaine State Forest ...

Worm-eating Warbler

Worm-eating Warbler
Prothonotary Warbler, Beaver Swamp WMA ...

Prothonotary Warbler

Prothonotary Warbler
Common Baskettail ...
Common Baskettail
Eastern Tailed-Blue ...

Eastern Tailed-Blue
And ... some of the younger of this year's crop of Canada Goose goslings ...

Canada Goose - goslings
More images soon.

Good birding!!

LinkWithin

Related Posts with Thumbnails