[TN-Butterflies] Re: impressions of the 2010 season

  • From: "Steve Stedman" <birdsongteam@xxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <kjchilds@xxxxxxxxx>, "TN Butterflies" <TN-Butterflies@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Sat, 11 Dec 2010 14:32:57 -0600

Hi Ken,

Nice summary; I hope others will weigh in about the kind of season they had 
during 2010.  Excellent year for Little Yellows in the area around Cookeville.

Steve Stedman
Cookeville (Putnam County)

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: kjchilds 
  To: TN Butterflies 
  Sent: Friday, December 10, 2010 2:04 PM
  Subject: [TN-Butterflies] impressions of the 2010 season


  2010 had a very slow start but it ended being a pretty good, and in some 
cases, an unusual year for butterflies.

  More than usual:
  Sachem
  Little Glassywing
  Common Sootywing
  Red Admiral
  Swarthy Skipper

  A lot more than usual:
  Gulf Fritillary
  Common Buckeye
  Dainty Sulphur
  Little Yellow
  Cloudless Sulphur
  Red-spotted Purple
  Common and/or White Checkered-Skipper

  Fewer than normal:
  Black Swallowtail
  Orange Sulphur
  Coral Hairstreak
  Carolina Satyr
  Little Wood-Satyr

  Later than normal:
  Clouded Skipper

  Earlier than normal:
  Checkered-Skipper (middle of August)
  Dainty Sulphur (early August)

  2010 was similar to 2009 in numbers and scheduled appearances for Confused 
Cloudywings but this year I saw them all over the farm instead of mainly in 
just one spot on my driveway.

  I saw another American Copper in Henderson County...this time a lot closer to 
my home. The sighting in 2009 and this one in 2010 were in places that I hadn't 
looked before so I don't know if these sightings are significant. 

  I found 3 White M Hairstreaks, which were the first 3 I've ever seen. The 
first one was a worn looking individual found in late March. It may be 
significant in that one found that early in the season should look very fresh 
so it's possible this one may have been able to overwinter. 

  After making a big showing in 2009, Goatweed Leafwings were few and far 
between. Considering I hadn't seen any here before 2009, this doesn't seem to 
be unusual.

  I didn't see as many butterflies in the lowland forests this year and the 
spring floods may or may not have had something to do with that. 2009 seemed 
like a good year for the forest species but since it was the first year that I 
spent any time looking in the local forest, I really don't know what normal is 
for this area. 

  I haven't done a count for how many species I saw this year but it feels like 
it was less than in 2009. Part of that may be because I didn't spend as much 
time photographing and IDing brown grass skippers this year. 


  Ken Childs
  Henderson, TN
  Chester County

  http://www.finishflagfarms.com






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