I saw several specimens of this species but I wasn’t able to get any good photos of them. I saw 7 on Saturday. Some were drinking nectar from sagebrush buttercups.
I caught this male specimen on July 25, 2003 on the edge of my friends’s neighbour’s driveway. It was perched on a Verbena bracteata {Bracted vervain.}
20’c mostly sunny breezy This was one of 21 swallowtails seen congregating, and appeared to possibly be two tailed with the rest being tiger and pale?
Sex is male. It was one of the first species of hairstreaks that I seen in Olalla BC that year.
Here's a Female puddling In a Large Puddle Near Km2 just West of Olalla Creek Canyon Road Similkameen Valley, Olalla , British Columbia, Canada.
The next photo I captured it to show the dorsal view of inside the wings of this handsome male Christina Sulphur.
Cone scales thin, pale, and jagged. Pretty sure the cones came from the photographed tree. In the last photo, tallest tree in the centre
A male. He was resting on the pathway on the ground just in front of one of the Salix discolour Pussy Willow see photo 2 near Robbie Creek photo one is him sunbathing on a white stem gooseberry bush Ribes inerme and this is photo 1.
A Queen hibernating under a black cottonwood decaying branch.
A drone resting on my mom’s Prunus tormentors Nanking Cherry shrub leaf.
glorious sunny days are bringing out butterflies; small white, painted lady and red admiral
When I was photographing Tsuga Mertensia the Mountain hemlock; I also found myself photographing Amabilis fir and Yellow Cedar.
Observed while surveying Sylvan Lake personal transect. Flying around by the lakeshore. Landed on a birch and then along the edge of an old wood pile. Not sure if I have the ID right - I think its a Comma of some kind but I might have the wrong species.
A note to anyone editing data quality or annotations: This specimen was alive when I collected it, and the data given reflect the time and place when the insect was observed alive.
Please adhere to iNat’s guidelines and do not mark this observation as “captive” or “dead”, as this causes problems for researchers attempting to find species records.
iNat's definition of a "wild" observation explicitly includes "your museum/herbarium specimens that are appropriately marked with date and location of original collection". The data given are the date and location of original capture, and as such, this observation should not be marked as captive. See #5 of the observation FAQ on the forum: https://www.inaturalist.org/pages/help#captive
The "dead" annotation should only be used if the organism was dead at the time of the observation. The question of insect specimen annotations has been had on the forums, and specimens which are dead in the photo but were alive at the time of capture should be annotated as "alive", not "dead". See here for discussion:
https://forum.inaturalist.org/t/annotate-dead-or-alive/17537
Thanks!
Oreas Comma
on willlow at Lake of the Woods, abvout 2000 metres elevation
A male sunbathing on a dead tree branch. All photos are of it alive except for The ventral photo it is dead because I collected it for my collection. Some of the Black Mine road specimens are very dark almost like the Silenus subspecies of Oreas Comma. This could be where both Threatfuli and Silenus overlap and we may see a mixture of both subspecies.
More studies needed to confirm this hypothesis.
A male that was drinking nectar from Bull thistle.