Agrias butterflies

Share the gems of your insect collection with the InsectNet community
Annarobertson1947
Junior Member
Junior Member
Reactions:
Posts: 83
Joined: Thu May 04, 2023 12:31 am
Australia

Re: Agrias butterflies

Post by Annarobertson1947 »

Trehopr1 wrote: Sat Apr 06, 2024 6:13 am Hello Tim !
Congratulations are in order for finishing up your schooling. 🙏🎉☺️

Very nice to see you once again posting some of your acquisitions. Have missed your presence here on the forum but, hope to see more of you here now as youthful collectors help to invigorate our forum !

A. narcissus is certainly a grand start in the genus and females of just about anything are just "icing on the cake" for one's collection.

Wish you well in your endeavors and do stay in touch with us here !
Cake needs icing : :D
User avatar
adamcotton
Global Moderators
Global Moderators
Reactions:
Posts: 784
Joined: Tue Mar 22, 2022 12:24 pm
Location: Thailand
Thailand

Re: Agrias butterflies

Post by adamcotton »

As recommended by Chuck, I moved all the posts below this one to a new topic called Global travel collecting at:

viewtopic.php?t=1554

Please continue that thread there rather than here, so posts about Agrias can continue in this thread.

Adam.
Annarobertson1947
Junior Member
Junior Member
Reactions:
Posts: 83
Joined: Thu May 04, 2023 12:31 am
Australia

Re: Agrias butterflies

Post by Annarobertson1947 »

Hi everyone,
Just a bit puzzled over A.pericles females , I'm seeing that lets take as an example, pericles aurantiaca and mauensis ,the females in particular are to me identticle,
There is a shift in males acrossssp but the females are very consistent generally.
Any thoughts ??
User avatar
hewi
Premium Member - 2024
Premium Member - 2024
Reactions:
Posts: 81
Joined: Mon May 23, 2022 8:44 pm
Germany

Re: Agrias butterflies

Post by hewi »

The females of mauensis can be very different. The forewing colouring changes from yellow to red at will. There are also specimens with blue and green colouring. I have never observed such a variety of colouration in aurantiaca.
User avatar
wollastoni
Site Admin
Site Admin
Reactions:
Posts: 478
Joined: Fri Mar 18, 2022 9:51 am
Location: France
France

Re: Agrias butterflies

Post by wollastoni »

As perfectly said by Manfred, females of ssp mauensis vary a lot, with some wonderful forms : see on the Agrias website : https://agrias-butterflies.com/agrias-p ... -mauensis/

There are less variations in female aurantiaca : https://agrias-butterflies.com/agrias-p ... urantiaca/
Annarobertson1947
Junior Member
Junior Member
Reactions:
Posts: 83
Joined: Thu May 04, 2023 12:31 am
Australia

Re: Agrias butterflies

Post by Annarobertson1947 »

So as far as i can see, mauensis orange form female became the dominant form for aurantiaca immaculatus and so on.
Annarobertson1947
Junior Member
Junior Member
Reactions:
Posts: 83
Joined: Thu May 04, 2023 12:31 am
Australia

Re: Agrias butterflies

Post by Annarobertson1947 »

I think all my questions are now answered, i purchased Manfreds book
User avatar
wollastoni
Site Admin
Site Admin
Reactions:
Posts: 478
Joined: Fri Mar 18, 2022 9:51 am
Location: France
France

Re: Agrias butterflies

Post by wollastoni »

Excellent books indeed.

And the more you will study Agrias, the more questions you will have ! It is a very interesting (and difficult) group.
Annarobertson1947
Junior Member
Junior Member
Reactions:
Posts: 83
Joined: Thu May 04, 2023 12:31 am
Australia

Re: Agrias butterflies

Post by Annarobertson1947 »

wollastoni wrote: Sun May 19, 2024 3:46 pm Excellent books indeed.

And the more you will study Agrias, the more questions you will have ! It is a very interesting (and difficult) group.
Well the confusion is compounded by the plethora of form names that i see as a money making system for dealers.
User avatar
wollastoni
Site Admin
Site Admin
Reactions:
Posts: 478
Joined: Fri Mar 18, 2022 9:51 am
Location: France
France

Re: Agrias butterflies

Post by wollastoni »

Don't see them like that.
Agrias are involved in very complex mimicry rings triggering different forms in each zone of Amazonia. Studying the distribution of each forms is very interesting. Each Rio of Amazonia seems to trigger different forms, these are the local forms. Then you have some individual forms (various forms inside the same population). Then you have "hybridization" between forms/subpecies at contact zones. Mix all that, and you have the craziness of Agrias (sub)genus ! That's why they are so interesting to study/collect.

Especially on some species like phalcidon (the king of Agrias species to my mind).
Annarobertson1947
Junior Member
Junior Member
Reactions:
Posts: 83
Joined: Thu May 04, 2023 12:31 am
Australia

Re: Agrias butterflies

Post by Annarobertson1947 »

I understand this but one would have to admit that a lot of dealers do stretch things in asking price to point of absurdity
User avatar
wollastoni
Site Admin
Site Admin
Reactions:
Posts: 478
Joined: Fri Mar 18, 2022 9:51 am
Location: France
France

Re: Agrias butterflies

Post by wollastoni »

It is all about offer and demand, Anna.
If sellers don't sell their "rare forms", the price will decrease.

Prices are going down on Agrias for various reasons :
- several species are now bred. Prices of phalcidon excelsior forms have collapsed for example. From $1,000 to $100 in few years.
- more and more "old collections" are for sale in Europe (many collectors are very old / dead and their collection are for sale), reinjecting a lot of Agrias specimens on the market.
Chuck
Premium Member - 2024
Premium Member - 2024
Reactions:
Posts: 947
Joined: Mon May 23, 2022 2:30 pm
Solomon Islands

Re: Agrias butterflies

Post by Chuck »

wollastoni wrote: Mon May 20, 2024 1:33 pm
Agrias are involved in very complex mimicry rings triggering different forms in each zone of Amazonia. Studying the distribution of each forms is very interesting. Each Rio of Amazonia seems to trigger different forms, these are the local forms. Then you have some individual forms (various forms inside the same population). Then you have "hybridization" between forms/subpecies at contact zones. Mix all that, and you have the craziness of Agrias (sub)genus ! That's why they are so interesting to study/collect.
A situation we are finding is far more common that ever thought- and not just in butterflies. Regional speciation in progress, recombinant hybrids, etc. In so many taxa, we can no longer put a specimen into a nice little "species box" anymore.
Chuck
Premium Member - 2024
Premium Member - 2024
Reactions:
Posts: 947
Joined: Mon May 23, 2022 2:30 pm
Solomon Islands

Re: Agrias butterflies

Post by Chuck »

Annarobertson1947 wrote: Tue May 21, 2024 7:47 am I understand this but one would have to admit that a lot of dealers do stretch things in asking price to point of absurdity
There is of course the point of asking as much as possible to maximize profit. There's a good chance somebody will come along and pay it. Remember, there are those for whom paying $300 too much is nothing, because it's only $300.

On the other hand, high $$ value attracts those who see themselves as top rarities collectors. I learned this many years ago at the LA Bug Show- I had a rare beetle that didn't sell on day 1. But instead of reducing the price on Day 2, I tripled the price. It sold quickly...then others were running to ask if I had more.

Finally, the high-$$ specimens may be part of the dealer's collection and they don't need to sell it, maybe don't want to sell it. I do this. I may price a $4000 item at $6000; you want to pay $6000 then you can have it, but otherwise I'll keep it, thank you.

It's easy for a dealer to initially price high, and reduce the price if it doesn't sell. That is what's typically and universally done.
Post Reply

Create an account or sign in to join the discussion

You need to be a member in order to post a reply

Create an account

Not a member? register to join our community
Members can start their own topics & subscribe to topics
It’s free and only takes a minute

Register

Sign in