Arthropoda: Insecta: Lepidoptera: Lycaenidae: Satyrium calanus [return to Home Page]

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Scientific name: Arthropoda: Insecta: Lepidoptera: Lycaenidae: Satyrium calanus
Common Name: Banded Hairstreak

Country: USA
State/District: NJ
County:
Date: July 2002

Photographer: E. M. Barrows

Identifier: E. M. Barrows
Collector: not applicable
Location: New Jersey Pine Barrens
Keywords: A Banded Hairstreak gray butterfly New Jersey Pine Barrens NJPB2002 pollination pollinator
Additional Information:



This male Banded Hairstreak perched on a quartz pebble in his territory. Part of his hindwings (which each have a false-head pattern) are missing, probably due to a bird’s grasping his wings with its beak.



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Scientific name: Arthropoda: Insecta: Lepidoptera: Lycaenidae: Satyrium calanus
Common Name: Banded Hairstreak

Country: USA
State/District: MI
County: Oakland
Date: July 2002

Photographer: J. J. Cravens

Identifier: E. M. Barrows
Collector: E. M. Barrows
Location: Troy
Keywords: A black butterfly blue butterfly gray butterfly Hairsteak orange butterfly
Additional Information:







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Scientific name: Arthropoda: Insecta: Lepidoptera: Lycaenidae: Satyrium calanus
Common Name: Banded Hairstreak

Country: USA
State/District: MI
County: Manistee
Date:

Photographer: E. M. Barrows

Identifier: E. M. Barrows
Collector: not applicable
Location:
Keywords: A blue butterfly gray butterfly orange butterfly Manistee pollination pollinator sunning
Additional Information:



The mornings of 16 and 17 July 2003 were beautiful in the Manistee National Forest, Michigan. Direct sun hit the ground and foliage (often Bracken Ferns). Many kinds of insects sunned before becoming active for the day. My nephew and I watched and photographed the insects. Assassin flies, Banded Hairstreaks, a Dun Skipper, grasshoppers, and a White Admiral sunned on Bracken Ferns. An American Painted Lady, Atlantis Fritillaries, and banded-wing locusts sunned on the ground. The Hairstreaks lay on their sides at first, warmed, and sat up vertically after they were very warm. Then male Hairstreaks chased one another. One Atlantis Fritillary sipped juices from an insect killed by colliding with a truck headlight. You can call up all pages on insect sunning on these days with “keyword:” Manistee sunning.

E. M. B. (October 2003)



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