Yes Krushnamegh

Gaurav told me about this Palmfly on phone when u were in Sikkim! I was
thinking that this is some variation of some other species of palmfly!

Regards
On Mon, Jan 30, 2012 at 9:47 PM, Krushnamegh Kunte
<[email protected]>wrote:

> **
>
>
> Rohan, thanks! You have made your year with much more than the Brown
> Gorgon and Jewelled Nawab. You also photographed the Pointed Palmfly 
> (*Elymnias
> penanga*):
>
> http://ifoundbutterflies.org/425-elymnias/elymnias-penanga
>
> This is not a species many people have seen, or even heard of. I bet most
> people could not even ID it if they saw if before. But now your picture is
> a great reference for everyone. I hope that you will get many such “firsts”
> in 2012.
>
> With best regards,
>
> Krushnamegh.
>
> -------------------------------------------------
>
> Krushnamegh Kunte, PhD
>
> Ramanujan Fellow and Reader
> National Center for Biological Sciences (NCBS)
> Tata Institute of Fundamental Research (TIFR)
> GKVK, Bellary Road,
> Bengaluru 560065, India.
> Ph: +91 80 2366-6001/02, extension 6410
>
> Mobile: + 91 9403-975-925
> Email: [email protected], [email protected]
> Website: http://biodiversitylab.org/
>
> Indian Foundation for Butterflies: http://ifoundbutterflies.org/
> Emails: [email protected], [email protected]
>
>
> ------------------------------
> *From: *rohan lovalekar <[email protected]>
> *Reply-To: *butterflyindia <[email protected]>
> *Date: *Mon, 30 Jan 2012 20:46:56 +0530
> *To: *butterflyindia <[email protected]>
> *Subject: *Re: [ButterflyIndia] Photo(s) of the year 2011
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Dear Krushnamegh
>
> This is just sensational! Especially that Large Siverstripe underwing pic!
> That for me Shot of the year! While processing that image for IFB I really
> feel jealous! :) I hope we can have blast in Northeast some time in future!
> And I did compensated for Krishna Peacock with Brown Gorgon and Jewelled
> Nawab
>
> Cheers
>
> On Mon, Jan 30, 2012 at 10:41 AM, Krushnamegh Kunte <
> [email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Hi all,
>
> Here is my late entry for the “Photo of the Year”. I have been busy
> setting up my lab and settling down in India since I moved back from Boston
> at the end of December. Anyway, I was hoping to make two field trips to
> India in 2011, but I managed to make just one. This is because I received
> my job offer and wanted to make progress on some work back in Boston before
> I left. But that turned out to be one wonderful whirlwind of a trip! In
> that month, May 2011, following the advice of Usha Lachungpa, I visited
> parts of South, East, West and North Sikkim Districts, and saw many
> butterfly species that I had dreamed of for many years. Some of them were
> new to me, others were new only to my camera. Gaurav Purohit joined me for
> two weeks, and we had a blast! I also made a new friend, Harsha Kumar, a
> young and fairly inexperienced fella, who scared away many a butterfly and
> made me miss many pictures that I wanted to take, but I enjoyed our time
> together, anyway. Here’s the selection from our trip:
>
> *Large Silverstripe (Argynnis childreni):* This is a common species and
> anyone who has been to mid-elevation Himalaya has probably seen this
> butterfly. I had seen it many times but had never managed to take a decent
> picture. And then one day we saw this individual that would not go away no
> matter what was going on in its neighborhood. I even managed to take out
> some larger stones from its background by hand while it was feeding. That’s
> how I got a clean, diffused, out of focus background in this picture. And I
> loved the green and pink in this frame. The picture is also available
> online at:
>
> http://ifoundbutterflies.org/122-argynnis/argynnis-childreni
>
> *Green Awlet (Burara vasutana):* I had never seen this species but had
> been waiting for it for years! One evening, as I walked along my favorite
> Pabung Khola, a reddish-brown butterfly swung around in front of me and
> kept circling round and round at super high speeds. When it finally settled
> on a bird dropping, I could not take my eyes off the metallic yellow-green!
> You can see why in the attached picture, and online:
>
> http://ifoundbutterflies.org/275-burara/burara-vasutana
>
> *Krishna Peacock (Papilio krishna):* This was another lifer for me. The
> only picture I knew of this species was that of Alka Vaidya from the
> Eaglenest WLS, which she had posted on this group some time ago. One day,
> after a morning of heavy rains, I opted out of field work to process my
> samples and tidy up notes in my field notebook. Unencumbered by such
> scholarly concerns about notes and data, Gaurav and Harsha set out to look
> for whatever butterflies they could photograph. They returned an hour or so
> afterward, their faces grinning ear to ear! They produced two species that
> made me turn green: the Tailed Redbreast (*Papilio bootes*) and the
> Krishna Peacock! Gaurav’s picture of the Krishna Peacock is now online (see
> URL below), and it is such a fantastic image! I did not think anyone would
> be able to take a picture of this species coming anywhere close in quality
> to Gaurav’s picture. But then, this was Sikkim, and just a few days later,
> we faced another Krishna Peacock that was just born to pose for pictures.
> See what I mean:
>
> http://ifoundbutterflies.org/47-papilio/papilio-krishna
>
> I must end this narrative with perhaps my biggest discovery so far, the 
> *Scarce
> Jester (Symbrenthia silana)*. You probably remember the history of this
> species; if not, check my website and my paper on the species. I have been
> to Sikkim three times, and I have seen this very rare species every single
> time! The attached picture was taken at Pabung Khola, at almost exactly the
> same spot where I had photographed this species one and half years before
> this picture. I like to think that this individual was perhaps the
> great-great-grandson of the individual that I had photographed here in
> 2009. Who knows! Pictures of both the individuals are available at:
>
> http://ifoundbutterflies.org/173-symbrenthia/symbrenthia-silana
>
> I met Subhasis on this trip for the first time, and met Arjan on my way
> out after a few years. Rohan, Usha and others wanted to join me on this
> trip but could not for various reasons. Now that I am back in India and
> will be in the field often, I hope to meet many of you in our forests to
> watch butterflies together.
>
> Wish you a happy and very productive 2012.
>
> With best regards,
>
> Krushnamegh.
>
> PS: I had replied to a few emails in the past two weeks (e.g., to emails
> by Subhasis and Sahil), I am not sure those emails made it to the group. I
> am copying this email to Vijay in the hopes that at least this email will
> reach you folks. My primary email address has changed, and there may be
> some hiccups before emails from the new email address start rolling out
> smoothly.
>
> -------------------------------------------------
>
> Krushnamegh Kunte, PhD
>
> Ramanujan Fellow and Reader
> National Center for Biological Sciences (NCBS)
> Tata Institute of Fundamental Research (TIFR)
> GKVK, Bellary Road,
> Bengaluru 560065, India.
> Ph: +91 80 2366-6001/02/18/19, ext 6410
> Mobile: + 91 9403-975-925
> Email: [email protected] <http://[email protected]> ,
> [email protected] <http://[email protected]>
> Website: http://biodiversitylab.org/
>
> Indian Foundation for Butterflies: http://ifoundbutterflies.org/
> Emails: [email protected] <
> http://[email protected]> , [email protected] <
> http://[email protected]>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>   
>

-- 
Enjoy

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