Dear Kishen,

Thanks for your encouragement and support. We will eventually have all the 
Indian species and subspecies covered on the website, we are working steadily 
towards that goal.

BTW, it is commonly said that there are approx. 1,500 butterfly species in 
India. That number is now outdated. I have listed all the Indian species and 
subspecies for my upcoming Catalogue, and there are no more than 1,300 species 
in India, and possibly as few as 1,200. More information about this will be in 
the Catalogue.

We have learned from our first server crash and virus attack. Now we take daily 
backups and frequently download backup copies on two computers and also store 
these on three external hard drives in at least three different places. We also 
handle all the uploads/downloads only from Mac and Linux computers, which are 
way less vulnerable to virus attacks and they are scanned daily with updated 
virus scanners, anyway. I sleep well nowadays with the assurance that we are 
extremely highly unlikely to lose the website again, or any photographs and 
data, for that matter.

With best wishes,

Krushnamegh.

________________________________
From: Kishen Das <[email protected]>
Reply-To: butterflyindia <[email protected]>
Date: Sat, 9 Jul 2011 19:57:16 -0400
To: butterflyindia <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [ButterflyIndia] BOI now has 412 species pages, 146 lifecycles and 
6,000 photos: 8 July '11






Dear Krushnameghji and team,

It would be amazing once we have 1501 species on IFB.
It would be the ultimate reference point.

Congratulations to all the people.
It indeed takes lot of hard work behind such a website.

Please keep taking multiple backups of the entire website, say every weekend.
I guess most of the websites now-a-days also support auto-backups.

Thanks,
Kishen


On Sat, Jul 9, 2011 at 6:52 AM, Kunte, Krushnamegh <[email protected]> 
wrote:





Folks, after recovering the Butterflies of India website on 6 Feb. 2011 and 
bringing the number of species pages to 135, we set ourselves what now appears 
as a modest target of 300 species pages. In the past five months we have made 
much progress and comfortably surpassed the target. Today, the Butterflies of 
India website has 412 species pages, 146 lifecycles, and approximately 6,000 
reference photographs. Major additions to species pages and to the collection 
of reference photographs came from recent field trips of our team members to 
the Garo Hills in Meghalaya, and from Sikkim in the Eastern Himalaya. The 
lifecycles were mostly the work of Dr. Saji K., who has contributed more than a 
hundred lifecycles and nearly 2,000 images to the website by now. Rohan 
Lovalekar and Gaurav Agavekar have taken some of the most stunning images of 
Indian butterflies that I have seen so far, and photographed hundreds of 
species in the past one or two years. In the past 3-4 months, they have also 
tirelessly formatted many of these pictures for the website, including those 
images given to them by others. Hats off to Saji, Rohan and Gaurav!

Here are two links that will lead you to most of the stuff that’s on the 
website right now:

http://ifoundbutterflies.org/species-pages/history-of-species-pages-on-butterflies-of-india-website

http://ifoundbutterflies.org/species-pages/history-of-lifecycle-pages-on-butterflies-of-india-website

Haneesh K. M., Subramanyam Kalluri, Hemant Ogale and Rudra Prasad Das have 
recently started to format a lot of their images for the website, covering 
areas of Bengaluru, Andhra Pradesh, southern Maharashtra and West Bengal, 
respectively. This shall bring important regional representation of butterflies 
and cover wing pattern variation of Indian butterflies on the website.

I hope that we will touch 500 species pages and nearly 8-10,000 reference 
images on the website by the end of this year. Your contributions are always 
appreciated, especially if you cover species that are not on the website yet, 
contribute photographs from an area that is not well represented on the 
website, or have captured unusual wing pattern variation in a particular 
species.

Feel free to write to me <[email protected] 
<http://[email protected]> > with any thoughts, suggestions and 
contributions.

With best wishes,

Krushnamegh.
-------------------------------------------------

Krushnamegh Kunte, PhD

Post-doctoral Research Fellow
FAS Center for Systems Biology
Harvard University
52 Oxford St., Northwest Lab Room 458.40-3
Cambridge, MA 02138, USA.

Ph: (617) 496-0078 <tel:%28617%29%20496-0078> , Cell: (512) 577-1370 
<tel:%28512%29%20577-1370> , Fax: (617) 495-2196 <tel:%28617%29%20495-2196>
Email: [email protected] <http://[email protected]>
Other emails: [email protected] <http://[email protected]> , 
[email protected] <http://[email protected]>

Personal website: http://www.people.fas.harvard.edu/~kunte/index.htm
Indian Foundation for Butterflies: http://ifoundbutterflies.org/
Google profile: http://www.google.com/profiles/krushnamegh








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