It was momentarily blown upsidedown by the wind.
Male. Two in this spot of the summit; this was the fresher one.
Male. Large. One of two on the summit, this one was the fresher one. Both these and the indra were keeping to their respective small areas of the peak, chasing each other only, not coming into any contact with the other species.
This is not the first time I have found rudkini on Sunset; I first did nearly twenty years ago. I am sure they are breeding on the Tauschia, but for some reason they never fly down to the road to puddle or nectar the way the indra regularly do.
I wondered how this would turn out...This is Lil Red's territory, (that's her tree home in the 1st frame). The turkey slowly & cautiously approached closer & closer to within several inches of the squirrel, then the turkey just quietly turned & moved away! The squirrel never said a word, just stood her ground. "Wild" animals never cease to amaze me!
Painted Bunting (Passerina ciris) – male
23 June 2015: Painted Bunting (Passerina ciris) by the sheer nature of its rainbow colors is one of those birds that once you’ve seen it you’ll never forget. We refer to the male of the species, though the female dressed in its green-yellow feathered garb has a striking presentation all its own. Painted Bunting is a species of bird that belongs to the Cardinal family, Cardinalidae. The male presented in our observation like the males of its species obtain their brightly colored plumage during its second year of life. During its first year the male can hardly be distinguished from that of the female’s plumage except upon close review. There are two recognized subspecies of the Painted Bunting, a Western Painted Bunting (Passerina ciris pallidior) (“breeds in the southcentral United States and northern Mexico”) and an Eastern Painted Bunting (Passerina ciris ciris) (“breeds in southeastern United States”). The two separate individuals we present in our observation are most likely Western Painted Bunting (Passerina ciris pallidior). These individuals were clearly resident in this region and were breeding in the immediate vicinity where our photographs documented their activity.
Our encounter with Painted Bunting this past summer occurred at Elm Fork Park which is administered by the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department (TPWD). Most of the major nature preserves in the region including the nearby twin branches (Isle du Bois and Johnson) of the Ray Roberts Lake State Park were closed due to the historic rainfall and flooding that ensued this past spring in Texas. End-of-the-year reports in 2015 noted how the year had been both the wettest in Texas since records have been kept starting in 1890. The TPWD personnel over at the Ray Roberts Lake State Park were directing people who came to their gates toward Elm Fork Park, about three miles down the road from their own location. Both parks are identified officially as being located in Pilot Point, Texas, which is at the northern edge of the North Texas metropolitan area in Denton County. Needless to say Elm Fork Park was filled with people who had been turned from numerous regional nature preserves and city, county and state parks as well due to the flooded conditions. Especially present were literally hundreds of people fishing. The fish were apparently biting due to the conditions in the Elm Fork Trinity River. The Ray Roberts Lake Dam’s water outlet at this location was at record high levels as well, as the US Army Corps of Engineers worked to release as much water as possible from the 29,000-acre Ray Roberts Lake, a surface area equivalent to nearly 46 square miles. In the North Texas area there are a total of 22 reservoirs that harvest the water of the Trinity River. In any case, this was the context under which we took these images. Through it all, flood or no flood, the songbirds present during the summer in the area continued their activity including Painted Bunting.
Painted Bunting is a North American songbird. It claims no permanent range and is entirely a migratory bird with wintering, breeding, and migratory ranges in the area roughly from the Atlantic Coast of the United States where North Carolina is located south to Florida, west to Texas and thence south through Mexico, and in Central America its wintering range falls short of reaching the northern edge of the South American continent. Painted Bunting also claims Cuba and other Island nations as its wintering grounds. Its breeding range happens to occur in Mexico’s Northeast bordering with the Río Bravo/Río Grande from El Paso south almost reaching that portion of this great river associated with the so-called Río Grande Valley, aka El Valle (the southernmost stretch of river before emptying into the Gulf of Mexico). Its wintering range extends east in Texas in the area of the Llano Estacado, the Edwards Plateau, continuing into the entire North Texas and East Texas area of the state and thence east and north into the following states: Oklahoma, Kansas, Missouri, Arkansas, Louisiana, and Mississippi. A discontinuous breeding ground (presumably the range of the Eastern Painted Bunting) is found on the Atlantic Coast associated with the states of Florida, Georgia, South Carolina and North Carolina as indicated previously. It is Eastern Painted Bunting that most likely then winters in the south of Florida and the Caribbean, especially Cuba. Its wintering migration into Mexico avoids the Baja California Peninsula entirely except as a vagrant. Habitat loss is one of the greatest threats facing Painted Bunting especially along the Atlantic Coast (of the United States) as well as their capture to sell in the pet trade particularly in Central America. And Brown-headed Cowbirds parasitize Painted Bunting nests to a significant extent and thus also represents part of the complex explanation of its declining number during the latter half of the 20th century. We are indeed fortunate to have this long distance visitor take residence with us in the North Texas region during the late spring and summer months. Because of its clearly large range in the middle of the Americas, Painted Bunting is certainly one of the most colorful and precious authentic residents of the Western Hemisphere. Elm Fork Park is administered by the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department.
Sources:
“Painted Bunting,” All About Birds, Cornell Lab of Ornithology, range map, photographs, description, resource links, accessed 1.4.16, https://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Painted_Bunting/id
“Painted Bunting,” Wikipedia, photograph, range map, description, bibliography, taxonomy, accessed 1.4.16, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Painted_bunting
“Passerina ciris - (Linnaeus, 1758) – Painted Bunting,” NatureServe Explorer: An Online Encyclopedia of Life, range maps, description, resource links, bibliography, accessed 1.4.16, http://explorer.natureserve.org/servlet/NatureServe?searchName=Passerina+ciris
“Ray Roberts Lake State Park,” Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, history, description, photographs, accessed 1.4.16, http://tpwd.texas.gov/state-parks/ray-roberts-lake/park_history
Checkered White (Pontia protodice)
7 March 2020
Anzalduas Park
6400 Anzalduas Dam Road
Mission, Hidalgo County, Texas 78572
Several Checkered Whites nectaring on Tridax Daisy (Tridax procumbens)...
A graceful exit by this California Scrub-Jay as it left its perch from an Oak tree.
On private land with permission
Not open to public
One of 6 babies that fledged in the yard, waiting around for the parents to feed it.
Hedgerow Hairstreaks and other butterflies on a steep, sandstone hillside slope lined with Manzanita, Chamise, and Salvia, off Pine Canyon Rd.
Link to Arctostaphylos (Manzanita) host plant: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/219562570
Hedgerow Hairstreak (Satyrium saepium) is a small, native, common butterfly in the Gossamer-winged Butterflies (Lycaenidae) family with a wingspan of 1.0-1.25 inches. It has one flight per year, May-August. It is found in chaparral, forest edges and openings, and occasionally in coastal shrub. Larval food plants are Ceanothus. Adult nectaring favorites include Buckbrush, California Buckeye, Thistles, Buckwheats, Yerba Santa, Chamise, and Coffeeberry. There are several subspecies with resulting color variations.
Butterflies of Monterey County: A comprehensive guide to finding and identifying 91 species of butterflies in Monterey County, by Chris Tenney, pp. 60-61.
Butterflies of San Francisco Bay and Sacramento Valley Regions: A Field Guide, pp. 133-134, plate 11.
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BUTTERFLY and CATERPILLAR (Annotated References):
In California, there are about 240 species of butterflies. There are more than 3,000 species of MOTHS, which represent 4 suborders in about 50 families. Butterflies have clubbed antennae, moths do not. Many moths are nocturnal, but not all.
Field Guide to California Insects, by Kip Will, J. Gross, D. Rubinoff , J. Powell, 2nd ed., 2020 (Lepidoptera, pp. 347-426)
Butterflies of Monterey County: A comprehensive guide to finding and identifying 91 species of butterflies in Monterey County, by Chris Tenney and photograher Jan Austin, August 2023 and companion website: https://www.montereybutterflies.online/
Glossary of Butterfly (and Moth) Terminology: https://butterfly.ucdavis.edu/resources/glossary
Butterflies of the San Francisco Bay and Sacramento Valley Regions: A Field Guide, Arthur M. Shapiro and Timothy D. Manolis, 2007
Law's Field Guide to the Sierra Nevada, John Muir Laws, California Academy of Sciences, 2007
eButterfly: (2115+ species) https://www.e-butterfly.org/ebapp/en/observations/explore
BugGuide: Butterflies and Moths (U.S. and Canada) clickable categories or use search bar: https://bugguide.net/node/view/57
Butterfly Wing Areas and Body Parts (diagram)
Butterflies Through Binoculars: The West: a field guide to the butterflies of western North America, by Jeffrey Glassberg, 2001, p. 40.
Butterflies Through Binoculars: The West: a field guide to the butterflies of western North America, by Jeffrey Glassberg, 2001
Butterflies and Moths of North America https://www.butterfliesandmoths.org/species_search
Butterflies of Central and Northern California, a laminated pamphlet (guide to common and notable species) by Jim Brock, 2023
Caterpillar Anatomy diagram and Butterfly Basics: https://www.enchantedlearning.com/subjects/butterfly/activities/printouts/caterpillarprintout.shtml Life Cycle of a Butterfly: Egg --> Larva (the caterpillar) --> Pupa (the chrysalis or cocoon) --> Adult.
Caterpillars: INaturalist Project https://www.inaturalist.org/projects/california-caterpillars
MALE
Orioles are usually seen in the vicinity of tall palm trees because they weave their nests behind the dead palm fronds. There are several tall palm trees in the neighborhood.
Hooded Oriole (Icterus cucullatus) is a migratory perching bird in the New World Blackbirds and Orioles (Icteridae) family. It is long and slender with a long and slightly decurved bill. Both sexes have white bars on black wings. Breeding males are more orange or orange-yellow than females. Males have a black bib, that appears oval when viewed from the front. They seem to enjoy visiting hummingbird feeders. They also enjoy the nectar of sliced oranges attached to feeders.
Hooded Orioles are sometimes called "Palm-leaf Orioles," because they "sew" their hanging nests onto the undersides of palm fronds. These nests are almost never visible from below. That’s why old palm fronds should never be cut down from the palm trees--to help preserve Oriole habitat.
Ebird with species description, range map and sound recordings: https://ebird.org/species/hooori/
Xeno-canto Bird songs, sound recordings, and species range map:
https://xeno-canto.org/species/Icterus-cucullatus
Audubon Guide to North American Birds https://www.audubon.org/field-guide/bird/hooded-oriole
National Geographic Field Guide to the Birds of North America, ed. Jon L. Dunn, 7th ed., 2017. pp. 540-541, 575.
National Geographic Field Guide to the Birds of Western North America, ed. Jon L. Dunn, 2008, pp. 396-397.
Monterey Birds, Don Roberson, 2nd ed. 2002, sponsored by Monterey Peninsula Audubon Society. p. 458.
The Cornell Lab (Birds in U.S. and Canada) https://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Hooded_Oriole
Compare to Scott's Oriole (Icterus parisorum): https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/199062614
Merlin Bird ID (great app available for Iphones) by The Cornell Lab (Bird ID help for 8,500+ species) https://merlin.allaboutbirds.org/
Comprehensive Feather I.D. tools and more: https://foundfeathers.org/resources/
Found Feathers (Worldwide): https://www.fws.gov/lab/featheratlas/idtool.php
BABIES!!! 1 set in 2 yrs! I saw this pair earlier hanging around in my south east bay, so I didn't go out in the canoe, not wanting to disturb them, 5 little ones! This is a new pair that decided to nest in close this year. All told I had 3 pairs in my bay this spring. :)
Western Whiptail (Aspidoscelis tigris) A.k.a. Tiger Whiptail. Native lizard in the Teiidae family that is found in a variety of habitats, including mountainous chaparral, deserts, and semi-arid shrubland. It lives in underground burrows. Skin is much smoother than Blue-belly lizards (Spiny Lizards (Sceloporus) genus).
"Aspidoscelis tigris as a species is 2 3/8 - 5 inches inches long snout to vent (6 - 12.7 cm), up to around 13 inches (33 cm) total length.
Appearance: A slim-bodied lizard with a long slender tail, a pointed snout, and large symmetrical head plates.Scales on the back are small and granular, and scales on the tail are keeled. The belly is made of large, smooth, rectangular scales in 8 lengthwise rows. The tail can reach up to two times the length of the body. The back and sides are gray, tan, or brown, marked with dark spots or bars or mottling, which is often very sharply defined. Dark marks on the side don't form vertical bars. Usually 8 faint light brown stripes are present, but stripes on the side are sometimes indistinct. The throat is pale with with large black spots. Often there are reddish patches on the sides of the belly. The tail tip is dark or bluish."
There are several subspecies in California.
Californiaherps: https://californiaherps.com/lizards/pages/a.t.munda.html
California Whiptail (Aspidoscelis tigris munda) is generally found north of the Channel Islands.
Range maps for this subspecies: https://californiaherps.com/lizards/pages/a.t.munda.html
HerpMapper https://www.herpmapper.org/taxon/Aspidoscelis_tigris
The Reptile Database https://reptile-database.reptarium.cz/species?genus=Aspidoscelis&species=tigris
Guide to Amphibians and Reptiles of California: https://californiaherps.com
There were many Gray Buckeye butterflies stopping to rest along the sandy trail. When approached from behind, the Gray Buckeye sometimes folds up its wings to display a “Predator Face.” Here's the closest I've come to catching that pose: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/218038685
Gray Buckeye (Junonia grisea) is a medium-large butterfly in the True Brushfoots (Nymphalidae) family. A.k.a. Peacock Butterfly, Grey Buckeye, or Western buckeye. It is found in North America, west of the Rocky Mountains. Like the common buckeye, the gray buckeye is a brown butterfly with eyespots on its wings that distract predators from its body. It has a characteristic flight of gliding between wing flaps. Larval food plants: Plantains, Snapdragons, Monkeyflowers, and others.
Gray Buckeye sometimes partly closes it's wing to make a "Predator Face" to scare off potential predators from behind. The photo I saw of that behavior looked like a "cat" face.
Butterflies of Monterey County: A comprehensive guide to finding and identifying 91 species of butterflies in Monterey County, Chris Tenney and Jan Austin, August 2023, pp. 142-143. and companion website to this field guide: https://www.montereybutterflies.online/
Bug photographs from the U.S/Canada for I.D: https://bugguide.net/index.php?q=search&keys=Junonia+grisea
eButterfly: https://www.e-butterfly.org/ebapp/en/species/profile/17159
Butterflies Through Binoculars: The West: a field guide to the butterflies of western North America, by Jeffrey Glassberg, 2001, p. 190-191.
Butterflies and Moths of North America https://www.butterfliesandmoths.org/species/junonia-grisea
Butterflies & Their Favorite Flowering Plants: Anza-Borrego Desert State Park & Environs, Lynn and Gene Monroe, 2004, p. 80.
Kaufman Field Guide to Butterflies of North America. Brock and Kaufman, 2003, pp. 206-207.
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BUTTERFLY and CATERPILLAR (Annotated References):
In California, there are about 240 species of butterflies. There are more than 3,000 species of MOTHS, which represent 4 suborders in about 50 families. Butterflies have clubbed antennae, moths do not. Many moths are nocturnal, but not all.
Field Guide to California Insects, by Kip Will, J. Gross, D. Rubinoff , J. Powell, 2nd ed., 2020 (Lepidoptera, pp. 347-426)
Butterflies of Monterey County: A comprehensive guide to finding and identifying 91 species of butterflies in Monterey County, by Chris Tenney and photograher Jan Austin, August 2023 and companion website: https://www.montereybutterflies.online/
Glossary of Butterfly (and Moth) Terminology: https://butterfly.ucdavis.edu/resources/glossary
eButterfly: (2115+ species) https://www.e-butterfly.org/ebapp/en/observations/explore
BugGuide: Butterflies and Moths (U.S. and Canada) clickable categories or use search bar: https://bugguide.net/node/view/57
Butterfly Wing Areas and Body Parts (diagram)
Butterflies Through Binoculars: The West: a field guide to the butterflies of western North America, by Jeffrey Glassberg, 2001, p. 40.
Butterflies Through Binoculars: The West: a field guide to the butterflies of western North America, by Jeffrey Glassberg, 2001
Butterflies and Moths of North America https://www.butterfliesandmoths.org/species_search
Butterflies of Central and Northern California, a laminated pamphlet (guide to common and notable species) by Jim Brock, 2023
Caterpillar Anatomy diagram and Butterfly Basics: https://www.enchantedlearning.com/subjects/butterfly/activities/printouts/caterpillarprintout.shtml Life Cycle of a Butterfly: Egg --> Larva (the caterpillar) --> Pupa (the chrysalis or cocoon) --> Adult.
Caterpillars: INaturalist Project https://www.inaturalist.org/projects/california-caterpillars
thin guy, came by for a drink from the pool. possibly our late night roof friend for the last few weeks
Eggs, on California pipevine.
Observed two Specks near the hwy on this evening. This one was absolutely eye popping !
Cut tree down yesterday; this Lizard was in the branch pile today. Released into back yard after photos.
Male. Subspecies is an approximation. It is definitely not ssp. neumoegeni from the low desert. Common and fresh but few females.
Cactus Springs Trail
Male
Cactus Springs Trail
In Creston Valley ..
Female L and Male R
This one took time out for a sip of water.
Variable Checkerspot butterfly Golden Yarrow (Eriophyllum confertiflorum) A.k.a. Yellow Yarrow blossoms. These Checkerspots have such photogenic little faces and they usually stay in one place for an extended time so it’s easier to get their photo.
Link to my favorite adult Variable Checkerspot nectaring with tongue extended: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/209000095
Link to observation of Variable Checkerspot caterpillars on Orange Bush Monkeyflower plant: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/107807408
Variable Checkerspot (Euphydryas chalcedona) is a medium-size butterfly in the Brush-footed Butterflies (Nymphalidae) family with a wingspan of 1.5-2 inches. The antennae are always orange, including the club. It's wing appearance is "variable," dependent on subspecies (and there are many ssp.) It has one flight March-July. It is found in open areas in oak woodland and chaparral, often along trails. Larval food plants include monkeyflowers and Paintbrush (Castilleja). It is a puddler.
Butterflies of Monterey County: A comprehensive guide to finding and identifying 91 species of butterflies in Monterey County, by Chris Tenney and photograher Jan Austin, August 2023, pp. 118-119.
eButterfly: https://www.e-butterfly.org/ebapp/en/species/profile/247
Link to observation of caterpillars on Orange Bush Monkeyflower plant: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/107807408
My favorite photo/observation of Variable Checkerspot face: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/112100146 and https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/75128788
Butterflies Through Binoculars: pp. 170-173.
Butterflies and Moths of North America: https://www.butterfliesandmoths.org/species/Euphydryas-chalcedona
BugGuide: https://bugguide.net/index.php?q=search&keys=Euphydryas+chalcedona
Kaufman Field Guide to Butterflies of North America. Brock and Kaufman, 2003, pp. 194-195.
Butterflies & Their Favorite Flowering Plants: Anza-Borrego Desert State Park & Environs, Lynn and Gene Monroe, 2004, p. 73.
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BUTTERFLY and CATERPILLAR (Annotated References):
In California, there are about 240 species of butterflies. There are more than 3,000 species of MOTHS, which represent 4 suborders in about 50 families. Butterflies have clubbed antennae, moths do not. Many moths are nocturnal, but not all.
Field Guide to California Insects, by Kip Will, J. Gross, D. Rubinoff , J. Powell, 2nd ed., 2020 (Lepidoptera, pp. 347-426)
Butterflies of Monterey County: A comprehensive guide to finding and identifying 91 species of butterflies in Monterey County, by Chris Tenney and photograher Jan Austin, August 2023 and companion website: https://www.montereybutterflies.online/
Glossary of Butterfly (and Moth) Terminology: https://butterfly.ucdavis.edu/resources/glossary
eButterfly: (2115+ species) https://www.e-butterfly.org/ebapp/en/observations/explore
BugGuide: Butterflies and Moths (U.S. and Canada) clickable categories or use search bar: https://bugguide.net/node/view/57
Butterfly Wing Areas and Body Parts (diagram)
Butterflies Through Binoculars: The West: a field guide to the butterflies of western North America, by Jeffrey Glassberg, 2001, p. 40.
Butterflies Through Binoculars: The West: a field guide to the butterflies of western North America, by Jeffrey Glassberg, 2001
Butterflies and Moths of North America https://www.butterfliesandmoths.org/species_search
Butterflies of Central and Northern California, a laminated pamphlet (guide to common and notable species) by Jim Brock, 2023
Caterpillar Anatomy diagram and Butterfly Basics: https://www.enchantedlearning.com/subjects/butterfly/activities/printouts/caterpillarprintout.shtml Life Cycle of a Butterfly: Egg --> Larva (the caterpillar) --> Pupa (the chrysalis or cocoon) --> Adult.
Caterpillars: INaturalist Project https://www.inaturalist.org/projects/california-caterpillars
Mr.Cangoos on land, saying good night to the dog. this is a nightly ritual now! :)
Two of them at this point, more arrived later...
Having an evening chat with Side Kick.
Continuing- Mr.Mrs Cangoos-
'Bottoms up.'..They come close enough now I could reach out & touch them
When ya got an itch......or two or three.....
Several peaking at the summit.
Male. Nectaring on yellow daisy bush on side of Mariposa Rd. (frontage road) in Hesperia off the Ranchero Road exit.
Wow, I woke up this morning and saw a Ground Squirrel in our backyard for the first time ever. But he was in a garden bed "checking the digs out". He must have just been out exploring for new territory, or he could be living in our firewood pile too. We can share the garden with him for awhile, but if he starts digging tunnels and holes and burrows, then I will have to trap him, and release him somewhere else away from the houses.
He might have been caught and eaten by a Gray Fox (www.inaturalist.org/observations/218267186) in our neighborhood.
5 Mar 2020
CA, SBE Co., CSUSB
Photo 1- Note the Desert Black Swallowtail larvae dropped by the Scrub-Jay, which is about to be eaten.
Photos 2 & 3- Eating the larvae, including banging it against the boulder.
Photo 4- Back with another larvae, tucked under its left foot.
Photo 5- Back a third time to the Turpentine Broom, which is the host plant of the Desert Black Swallowtail.
Photo 6- Gotcha!
Solar eclipse totality c. 3:25 PM
Bat foraging ......at least from 5:15 PM through 5:50 PM ... to ?
during which the bat rested on the roof a few times.
On chaparral pea (Pickeringia montana) see next photo
Monster flight with 30-odd seen today with many at nectar. This particular canyon notch had lots of nectar plants and lots of loki. Coordinates 33.574444, -116.423333 on the Cactus Spring Trail 5E01 of the Santa Rosa Mtns. in Pinyon Pines, CA.
Perching on a small fig tree