Entomology

  • Curators Astounded!

    Well as you may have guessed the subject isn’t as shocking as my title suggests, but I couldn’t help but to spin from the Guardian article.  I really find it hilarious when I come across anything that says scientists are “astounded”, “baffled”, “shocked”, “puzzled”, – I guess that’s a topic for another time…  Nevertheless a…

  • Monday Moth

    Today’s moth is a beautiful and rare species from SE Arizona and Mexico: Lerina incarnata (Erebidae: Arctiinae).  Like many other day flying species it is brilliantly colored and quite likely aposematic.  After all, the host plant is a milkweed and the caterpillar is just as stunning (below).   This image of an old, spread specimen hardly…

  • Monday Moth

    I’m going to keep the ball rolling with this series and try to make it more regular.  I will also focus on highlighting a new species each week from the massive collections here at the California Academy of Sciences.  This should give me enough material for… at least a few hundred years. This week’s specimen…

  • Arizona on Fire

    Maps/containment % updated: 16 June As July approaches I being to look forward to the Pacific Coast meeting of the Lepidopterists’ Society.  This year it will take place in Prescott Arizona, about 2 hours north of Phoenix.  And as of this moment it is one of the few places in Arizona not on fire.  I’m…

  • 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…