A cold front was scheduled to hit the Rio Grande Valley of south Texas on the 29th so I took advantage of the 85F warm weather at the National Butterfly Center. As had been the case lately, the park had plenty of good butterflies though nothing earth shattering. The Northern Faceted-Skipper (Malicious Skipper) in the ditch has been a lifer butterfly for most. I got my best shots of it.
Butterflies in the Family Nymphalidae have only four legs. But they are insects so where are the other two legs? The front pair of legs are reduced in size. In the case of this Pavon Emperor they are day glow green and flank the green proboscis.
I've seen more Red-lined Scrub-Hairstreaks this fall than I had in total the past twenty years.
Lots of Western Pygmy Blues lately.
Early on the 28th Ryan Rodriguez found a Clench's Greenstreak. Later in the day I thought I ad had found a second. But this scruffy bug turned out to be a Telea Hairstreak. The PM band is hard to see.