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Topic: Japanese collector just arrested in Costa Rica | Author: laurie2 | Replies: 2 | Views: 49
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wollastoni
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Re: Japanese collector just arrested in Costa Rica

by wollastoni » Tue Mar 25, 2025 8:15 am

Sad.
Go to pro-entomology countries (there are a few remaining) or take the time to get permits/authorizations. Every year, one collector faces a big issue somewhere in the world...

Hope he won't end in jail for few common butterflies.
Anyone knows who this "Motoaki" is ?
Topic: Japanese collector just arrested in Costa Rica | Author: laurie2 | Replies: 2 | Views: 49
Topic: Moving/ downsizing, donating collection, books, getting old | Author: Chuck | Replies: 74 | Views: 20572
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Re: Moving/ downsizing, donating collection, books, getting old

by Chuck » Mon Mar 24, 2025 7:32 pm

Well, it's been three days since 25% or so of my collection was picked up by one of the big retailers.

If I had to pick one word, it's relieved. There was a lot of very desirable but hard to find species, and I'd felt guilty about having them. Now, what he doesn't cherry pick out for himself will be made available to collectors.

Beyond that, I have to share what a dummy I am.

I'd scheduled w/ Cornell for pick-up this Wednesday.

And for weeks, I've watched my lovely lady every night and on weekends: patching, sanding, painting. Day in, day out. And finally, she's done. The walls are all refreshed, the trim moulding all painted, some of it new. Then she vacuumed the whole house, and steam cleaned the carpets. She's really knocked herself out- I mean really- she's exhausted.

Then it dawned on me.

Wednesday, the day of Cornell pickup, is the day the house gets listed for sale. Open house is Thursday, Friday, Saturday.

Now, what is the chance that in moving a whole lot of drawers through one freshened hallway, and down one steam cleaned set of stairs, that nobody bumps a wall or gets dirt on the carpet? I don't know, but it's not zero. Which would mean that I'd then have to tell me missus that we ruined her hard work the day before the open house.

That, I think you will know, would be the death of me. So I had to reach out to Cornell and ask for a postponement. Dummy.
Topic: Siderone | Author: daveuk | Replies: 17 | Views: 6827
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Re: Siderone

by wollastoni » Sun Mar 23, 2025 5:57 pm

I caught a female in French Guiana (Kaw mountain) but I guess you already have pictures from French Guiana specimens.

Very strong flyers, I was pretty proud of myself to net it ! :)
Most specimens are caught with traps.
A friend of mine caught a male with his car. He found a perfect male crashed on his windshield wiper !
Topic: Siderone | Author: daveuk | Replies: 17 | Views: 6827
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Re: Siderone

by ridware » Sun Mar 23, 2025 2:55 pm

does anyone have specimens of galanthis from Guyana and/or Surinam ? i am compiling images of galanthis from countries adjacent to Trinidad for comparison. i believe Trinidad galanthis should be treated as a seperate ssp. Michel Dottax agrees.
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Re: Are there any butterfly flight houses in the U.S. where you can see live Ornithoptera sp.?

by Paul K » Sun Mar 23, 2025 2:34 pm

Back to the subject I do remember seeing O.priamus in Niagara Falls butterfly house. It is not really in US but just across the river. I had pleasure to meet Chuck there few years ago.
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Re: Are there any butterfly flight houses in the U.S. where you can see live Ornithoptera sp.?

by Paul K » Sat Mar 22, 2025 9:42 pm

It is also disappointing to travel to tropical forests and find out that the number of encounter butterflies ( per square area ) is much lower than in visited previously butterfly house.
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Re: Are there any butterfly flight houses in the U.S. where you can see live Ornithoptera sp.?

by jhyatt » Sat Mar 22, 2025 1:28 pm

Butterfly houses always give me a mild case of vertigo. It unsettles me to see Neotropical and SE Asian species flying together!

jh
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Annarobertson1947
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Jan Pasternak " Fluttering encounters in an amazing Archipelago

by Annarobertson1947 » Sat Mar 22, 2025 4:44 am

I have a lovely copy for sale, if interested pm me
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TermiteHydrogen
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Termites can produce Hydrogen, and could be a solution to Climate Change

by TermiteHydrogen » Fri Mar 21, 2025 4:24 pm

Hi,

I'm a Chemical Engineering PhD student currently studying Hydrogen production from Termites (naturally, they're not harmed at all), and would like to share a video on the topic which also documents my journey up to this point.




Regards
Topic: Nymphalis antiopa? | Author: livingplanet3 | Replies: 7 | Views: 191
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Re: Nymphalis antiopa?

by livingplanet3 » Fri Mar 21, 2025 2:28 pm

Thanks to all for your input. The trap pictured is constructed somewhat differently from mine, which doesn't have so wide a gap between the bait tray platform and net.
Topic: Moving/ downsizing, donating collection, books, getting old | Author: Chuck | Replies: 74 | Views: 20572
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Re: Moving/ downsizing, donating collection, books, getting old

by Chuck » Fri Mar 21, 2025 12:10 pm

Cabintom wrote: Fri Mar 21, 2025 8:08 am About a month ago I had to urgently relocate away from Bunia. I was able to charter a Cessna Caravan out, but it was filled with our team members and other colleagues, so non-essential belongings were left behind. My collection sits there as we wait to see what will happen .
Sorry you had to depart, but I've been there and done that. Having a bag ready to go is an old method to save the most important, because there's often no warning- just grab and go.

Historically, I'd kept my collection to a 100 drawer maximum, and any excess was sent off, but I got lazy and sloppy (frankly, free time is somehow less than ever- how can that be?)

About 1/3 of it is being picked up by a well known retailer today. About 1/2 is being picked up by Cornell next week. I'll retain about 24 drawers, of which (I am PRAYING) some will be empty for future use.

This plan, I hope, satisfies several concerns: (1) it keeps me in the game, (2) it disperses my collection so that one event won't destroy my legacy, and (3) collectors like some folks here have the opportunity to get hard-to-find specimens.
Topic: Moving/ downsizing, donating collection, books, getting old | Author: Chuck | Replies: 74 | Views: 20572
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Re: Moving/ downsizing, donating collection, books, getting old

by wollastoni » Fri Mar 21, 2025 9:38 am

Glad to hear you are safe Thomas. I thought a lot about you with the recent events.
Hope you will be able to go back to Bunia soon and that your unique collection is safe. As you said, it's part of the life there...
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"Les Agrias", Seraphin 2025. New monography about Agrias

by wollastoni » Fri Mar 21, 2025 8:41 am

Gilles Seraphin has just published an impressive monography about Agrias butterflies.

The work of a life ! 400 pages, an impressive historical research combined with modern genetic analysis. And a cooperation with several major entomologists and Agrias collectors (especially JP Joubert).
I have just received the book and it already answers some questions I had about rare specimens with dubious status in my collection.

A real bible !
The book is unfortunately in French, with English abstracts for each chapter and a lot of plates with latin names. But all serious Agrias collectors should buy it.

For sale by Antenor (a French entomological association).
Price : 120€ + shipping
Order it at Antenor : antenor.tls@orange.fr
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Topic: Moving/ downsizing, donating collection, books, getting old | Author: Chuck | Replies: 74 | Views: 20572
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Re: Moving/ downsizing, donating collection, books, getting old

by Cabintom » Fri Mar 21, 2025 8:08 am

About a month ago I had to urgently relocate away from Bunia. I was able to charter a Cessna Caravan out, but it was filled with our team members and other colleagues, so non-essential belongings were left behind. My collection sits there as we wait to see what will happen .

Fortunately(?), when you live in DRCongo, evacuations are an almost expected reality of life. So, I implemented an ongoing contingency plan:
1) Photographing every specimen that comes off the spreading boards (in as best quality as I can muster).
2) Depositing the more interesting material at the African Butterfly Research Institute (or elsewhere) whenever possible.
3) Keeping all interesting (or semi-interesting) unset material in a single easy-to-pack sealed plastic container.
4) Keeping scientifically interesting material in a single box for quick & easy transfer to their own plastic container.

So, here I am safely in northern Congo (out of the red zone) with my unset specimens and a small container of material I planned on donating (mostly to someone who's working on a revision of Appias & Dixeia).
Topic: NY Man charged with smuggling birdwings | Author: Kona | Replies: 62 | Views: 37277
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Re: NY Man charged with smuggling birdwings

by eurytides » Thu Mar 20, 2025 5:32 pm

Immediately after eclosion, there might be a tiny amount of moisture on the surface of the scales. This could affect the wavelengths of light that constructive/destructively interfere, altering the colour we see, like the shifting rainbow on the surface of a soap bubble.
Topic: NY Man charged with smuggling birdwings | Author: Kona | Replies: 62 | Views: 37277
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Re: NY Man charged with smuggling birdwings

by mothman55 » Thu Mar 20, 2025 5:10 pm

adamcotton wrote: Tue Mar 18, 2025 6:48 pm I seem to remember reading that males of O. priamus poseidon are orange immediately on emergence from the pupa, and turn green as the wings dry. Can anyone confirm this?

Adam.
I think you may be right Adam, in some cases. When I raised Cairn's birdwings, I do remember one having a reddish orange sheen over the green just after emergence. It soon disappeared once dry. I have seen a photo of this on the internet some time ago, and when I saw the photo it reminded me of what I had seen. I remember hoping it would retain this colour and be something very special, but alas, it soon disappeared. I just did an internet search looking for this photo which displayed this phenomenon, but I can't find it. I reared a number of males, and only recall seeing this once. Perhaps it only lasts for a few minutes during the drying and as they typically have their wings folded while drying, possibly it would only be visible if they were disturbed and opened their wings briefly.
Topic: Moving/ downsizing, donating collection, books, getting old | Author: Chuck | Replies: 74 | Views: 20572
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Re: Moving/ downsizing, donating collection, books, getting old

by kevinkk » Thu Mar 20, 2025 4:57 pm

Some things just might last forever. If you can get your data or photos on the internet, it'll be there a very long time.
Topic: Naturalis Bioportal | Author: wollastoni | Replies: 2 | Views: 59
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Re: Naturalis Bioportal

by wollastoni » Thu Mar 20, 2025 2:36 pm

Rob de Vos tells me that only the Malesian part of the butterflies have been digitized and photographed. And then only the ZMA Papilionidae, Pieridae and a small part of the Nymphalidae.
Topic: Rare Delias butterflies | Author: wollastoni | Replies: 72 | Views: 21786
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Re: Rare Delias butterflies

by wollastoni » Thu Mar 20, 2025 2:21 pm

Well, collectors/explorers dit it.

Several mountains of New Guinea (especially in West Papua) would produce FOR SURE some new species if anyone is able to go and collect there : Foja Mountains, Wandammen Mts.
Some islands may still have some unknown full species but that's more dubious (Goodenough, ...).

To give you an example : the Foja Mts (not that far from Jayapura, but populated by an aggressive tribe + National Park) have been explored only twice by Henk van Mastrigt in the 2000s. He has spent very few days there. He has found 5 new Delias species. Delias cumanau for example : https://www.delias-butterflies.com/spec ... as-cumanau
Imagine being able to spend one year there... or to have a local catcher on place...