Collecting

  • Arizona followup

    Map/% updated June 20, 6pm. Updates to the maps and containment percentages have been made to my earlier post.  Here is a map of the 4th fire burning in SE Arizona, the Monument fire.  This one is only 10% 17% 15% 27% contained and is burning in the southern end of the Huachuca Mountains into Mexico….

  • Monday Moth

    Whoops, it’s almost Tuesday!  Above is Schinia ligeae (Noctuidae) resting on its host plant Xylorhiza tortifolia, the Mojave Aster.  I photographed this about three weeks ago outside the town of Big Pine, California.  The asters were thick in the valleys below the snow capped Sierra, and the moths were abundant.  Somehow these medium-sized Schinia get away with…

  • Sunday Moth

      Everyone is familiar with the famous death’s head hawkmoth, but I think it’s a shame we have popularized such a grim character.  Above is a much more cheery Neotropical Arctiinae from French Guiana that looks like it’s sporting a clown face.  Sadly this isn’t my photograph, but you should take a moment to explore…

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    The Moth is off to Catalina

    [cetsEmbedGmap src=http://maps.google.com/maps?ll=33.393039,-118.416824&spn=0.359452,0.715485&t=h&z=11 width=600 height=330 marginwidth=0 marginheight=0 frameborder=0 scrolling=auto] Tomorrow morning I’m off for a 10 day collecting trip down to Catalina Island.  I’ve been lucky enough to be invited to join Dr. Jerry Powell of UC Berkeley on a moth survey, and this will be my first time to any of the islands.  The Channel Islands…

  • Back in the Field

    Tomorrow begins stage 1 of field work/crazy driving and vacation time.  I will be focused on collecting for this stage of the trip, hitting southern Texas just in time for the tail end of fall flying moths in the genus Schinia.  But microleps are my primary interest, and I’m sure I’ll come back with hundreds…

  • Time has flown

    Wow it’s been a few weeks since my last post, and I’m a bit embarrassed having let it go so long.  What have I been up to?  Not a whole not.  No impressive collecting trips, no new species or discoveries.  Actually I’ve been sitting at a microscope dissecting genitalia or databasing parasitic flies.  I’ll have…

  • A Sierran Spider

    A weekend without moths can lead a lepidopterist to do crazy things.  Crazy enough to photograph a spider.  Over the weekend I was accompanied to the eastern Sierra by fellow insect blogger, coworker and arachnologist, Tamas Szuts.  I was on the quest for more specimens of a new Hepialidae of which you may be familiar with…