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Post by miguel on Apr 15, 2019 8:34:26 GMT -8
Very sensitive people arriving lately to this fórum.
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Post by miguel on Mar 6, 2019 14:17:52 GMT -8
Zerene eurydice?
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Post by miguel on Jan 20, 2019 7:11:17 GMT -8
For me collecting is an excuse to be outdoors as long as I can,other reason is that while I´m collecting I can to speak loud with myself and not to think that I´m going crazy.
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Post by miguel on Dec 29, 2018 7:40:39 GMT -8
For me they are Apatura for sure but they are not like the european Apaturas(unless they are an aberration),as you say They are probably from South East Asia.
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Post by miguel on Dec 25, 2018 3:34:56 GMT -8
I recently received a few Catocala from a moths trap sites in a vineyard,when I opened the box the moths smelled like grapes.
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Post by miguel on Dec 8, 2018 17:03:00 GMT -8
Leptraps::
Yes,one of their proposals in a recent election was that,to ban the Hunt,in the towns governed by them the circus shows with animals are banned too and they want to close the zoos
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Post by miguel on Dec 8, 2018 12:17:47 GMT -8
Maybe I have said Ski cause I hate that Sport but I think is very correct the global warming in small mountains,I remember in the beginning of the 90´s that Apollo was flying in a isolated mountain around 1500 mts high,around ten years later they flied around 1600 mts high and I haven´t seen them in years there.
The overgrowing vegetatiton was a problema with Phengaris arion in Ordesa National Park,They banned the cows inside the park and the butterfly desapeared,few years later the cows returned , the biotopes for the butterfly returned and the butterfly too
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Post by miguel on Dec 8, 2018 9:52:32 GMT -8
After the los of the Schalke against the Dortmund I´m sure that the bug Will return.
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Post by miguel on Dec 8, 2018 9:29:35 GMT -8
Jan:
I have to say that the populations of Apollo that I know are in very good condition,somtimes I think that the autorities have more interest in the conservation of Apollo because is a big butterfly(I have the same sensation with Actias isabellae),for example if you go to Teruel you Will see easily Apollo in each one of their mountains.
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Post by miguel on Dec 8, 2018 8:24:03 GMT -8
In Spain you need permits even if you are out of a Park,but in my case I wanted to prospect inside a Park and I have no problems with nobody.
In 2001 I made a trip to Italy and I asked if permits were needed,the person from the Italian Society told me that the permits wasn´t needed but It would better come with a paper to support the collecting.
I brought two boxes of butterflies and moths to my job to support one activity of one workmate and nobody made any negative comments.
Otherwise our comunists want to ban the Hunt,I suppose that they´ll try to ban our collecting too
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Post by miguel on Dec 8, 2018 4:12:18 GMT -8
Three years ago I went to see Apollo in Sierra Nevada,between Granada and Almeria and I seen so many of them, maybe Apollo was the most common butterfly in that place,I know places in Teruel where is also very common and in the Pirineos if you go to the right place you Will see Apollo for sure.
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Post by miguel on Dec 7, 2018 12:41:37 GMT -8
I know a population of Apollo aparently extinted due to a Works of erradication of Thaumetopoea pytiocampa,otherwise there are places that Apollo is a still a very common butterfly.
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Post by miguel on Dec 7, 2018 5:28:19 GMT -8
Talking about the populations of Spain that I know I think their biggest problems are pesticides,farming and ski.
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Post by miguel on Nov 12, 2018 13:03:10 GMT -8
The two species of Hemaris that are present in Spain are easy to catch in May during the day in places with flowers.
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Post by miguel on Oct 14, 2018 12:56:27 GMT -8
My first butterfly was collected in 1988,It was Leptidea sinapi.
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