Sat
May 31 2008
04:51 pm

This butterfly appears to have a clipped wing. The break at the base of the left hindwing looks too straight to have happened naturally. It cuts at least four veins cleanly, right in a line.

Does anyone know of a local study involving butterflies, possibly the Diana fritillary? My guess is this butterfly was captured, clipped and released. It may have been to get a genetic sample, but if my observation could be of use to someone studying fritillaries, I would be happy to share the photo and information.

I know it is a fritillary, but I do not know how to reliably identify them to species or how many occur in the Little River watershed. This one perches with wings down so it is hard to see the underwing. Its flight is rapid and energetic, so the wings are a blur, but it did not seem to have as much silver on the underwing as the late summer fritillary.

I saw at least a dozen over 20 or 30 minutes this morning, often several at a time with pairs doing a rising, twisting dance. Later in the day a blue/black butterfly of similar size and flight habit zipped by me. Does anyone know fritillaries well enough to ID this one?

Tess's picture

do you know about this database?

rikki's picture

That's awesome, thanks Tess!

That's awesome, thanks Tess! I'm contacting the Tenn. coordinator.

rikki's picture

Monday bump

Thought I would freshen this thread for people who mostly read while at work.

Whoever clipped this creature did a great job. It was vigorous and possibly miles away from where it was captured.

R. Neal's picture

No, but this is a

No, but this is a fascinating post. My takeaway is, protect the Little River Watershed, and all its flora and fauna.

rikki's picture

Fortunately, a good bit of

Fortunately, a good bit of that watershed enjoys National Park status, and it also has the Little River Watershed Association looking after it, but, yes, I hope Foothills Land Conservancy and Blount Co get as much of the floodplain into permanent easements possible and that Townsend, Walland, Wildwood and Rockford respect the streams and shoreline and soil as they grow.

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