All three needed correction? 
Amazing ignorance.
Cheers


________________________________
 From: Krushnamegh Kunte <[email protected]>
To: butterflyindia <[email protected]> 
Sent: Sunday, February 5, 2012 11:16 AM
Subject: Re: [ButterflyIndia] Re: [Indianmoths] Photo of Year 2011
 

  
Shyam, all these are wonderful moments and pictures. The names should be 
corrected, though:

Glassy Tiger (Parantica aglea), Dark Palm Dart (Telicota bambusae), and Common 
Lineblue (Prosotas nora).

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: SHYAM GHATE <[email protected]>
Reply-To: butterflyindia <[email protected]>
Date: Sat, 4 Feb 2012 09:50:37 -0800 (PST)
To: butterflyindia <[email protected]>
Subject: [ButterflyIndia] Re: [Indianmoths] Photo of Year 2011

 
 
 
   

Hello Vijay,

Sorry for a very belated responce but here it finally is.

After debating a bit on the choice of photographs to send, I decided on sending 
two sets (of 3pics each). You please decide which one, if at all, to keep.

cheers

Here is Set 1:

The butterfiles in this set are quite commonplace but I thought these were 
interesting records.

Blue Tigress:

This is a part of a sequence of photographs made at Yeoor, Thane. As this 
butterfly landed on the Rattlepod leaf, a cat that was feeding on it seemed to 
scamper for the  safety of a lower leaf. In its haste, it seemed to lose 
balance and the butterfly seemed to stretch its antennas to prop it. Next 
moment, the cat flared its spikes and the butterfly withdrew as if in alarm. A 
moment later, the cat had dropped to the lower leaf.  I don't think I really 
understand the sequence but I am just making a guess. Fascinating in any case.

Mating games:

This is also part of a sequence of pics I posted earlier on the group. It was a 
fascinating display of foreplay by these palm darts, with the male in the rear 
chasing the female all over and prodding her with its antennas, forelegs & head 
and the female occasionally responding by raising her abdomen. Photographed at 
Yeoor, Thane.

Mid Air Mating:

This pair of Tailed Line Blues mating was photographed at the Bhandup mangroves 
in Mumbai. The male was barely sitting on a twig with the female hanging by the 
locked organs. Look at the way she is straining her body by folding her legs 
underneath her. Then, disturbed by my presence, the male took off with the 
female still locked. That was when this picture was taken.





  
 
 
 
________________________________
  From:Vijay Vasant Barve <[email protected]>
 To: [email protected]; [email protected] 
 Sent: Friday, February 3, 2012 5:46 AM
 Subject: [Indianmoths] Photo of Year 2011
 
 
  
   
Hi

We received good response for Photo of Year 2011. If you still have not posted 
yours please do it soon.

I have already uploaded all the photos to 
http://diversityindia.org/photo/thumbnails.php?album=23 if you have posted your 
photo and I have missed it for some reason, please let me know soon so I can 
locate and upload them.

If you have any moths photos to share please share them on IndianMoths group 
for Photo of Year 2011. Details are here 
http://diversityindia.blogspot.com/2012/01/indianmoths-theme-of-month-january-2012.html

Regards,

Vijay

-- 
---
Vijay Vasant Barve
http://diversityindia.org/
---
 
 


 
 
  

   


 
 

-- 
Enjoy

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