Tuesday, June 29, 2010

back from Nashville!

I just returned from Nashville, Tennessee where I attended "The Climate Project’s International Presenter Training Session". The session consisted of 676 people from 26 countries. While there, I was trained by Al Gore and other important figures involved in solving the climate crisis.
I am now an official presenter for The Climate Project (TCP).

While there, I was part of Inconvenient Youth, which is a branch of TCP that focuses on teens. Several other teens and I discussed ways to get kids our age involved in the pressing issue of climate change.


I will post more soon!

Sunday, June 20, 2010

Butterfly Count Results

Yesterday was the Monroe-Carbon Butterfly Count. The 15-mile diameter count circle stretches from Kunkletown, Monroe County to Bowmanstown, Carbon County. Yesterday, three groups of butterfly watchers went out to identify and count as many species as possible. Between the three groups, we found 348 individual butterflies of 30 species and logged 18.5 group hours (all of our hours added together) of butterfly watching.

Here in Kunkletown, I spent 12 hours looking for butterflies. I decided to spend the entire day butterflying around my property.

I started at 7:00am and within a few minutes, found the first butterfly of the day, a fairly large brown one called a Common Wood-Nymph. Throughout the day, I walked through the field and the woods, counting every species that I could find.

The biggest surprise came when I checked a blooming Wild Hydrangea. From a distance, I saw a small, dark butterfly nectaring on the flowers. When I got closer, I realized that it was a hairstreak. I assumed that this was a Banded Hairstreak, a fairly common butterfly of woodlands during the summer. However, when I put up my binoculars to get a better view, I realized that I was looking at a Striped Hairstreak. Striped Haristreaks are much less common than Bandeds, so this was a great treat.

Striped Hairstreak
Striped Hairstreak on Wild Hydrangea

Although a few butterflies, like the hairstreak, a Summer Azure, and some Northern Pearly-eyes were in the woods, the majority of the butterflies that I found were in the field. Blooming Common Milkweed and Canada Thistle attracted many butterflies including Great Spangled Fritillaries, very large numbers of Little Glassywings, and even a Common Buckeye.

My final species of the day was a Crossline Skipper. On my final check of a large Common Milkweed patch, I found one of these with several Little Glassywings. Before I headed inside, I checked some Purple Coneflowers and found another Crossline.

Crossline Skipper on Common Milkweed

I finished at 7:00pm with 22 species.

Here are the totals from the entire count:

1 Black Swallowtail (Papilio polyxenes)
3 Eastern Tiger Swallowtail (Papilio glaucus)
22 Spicebush Swallowtail (Papilio troilus)
89 Cabbage White (Pieris rapae)
16 Clouded Sulphur (Colias philodice)
7 Orange Sulphur (Colias eurytheme)
1 Striped Hairstreak (Satyrium liparops)
1 Gray Hairstreak (Strymon melinus)
5 Eastern Tailed-Blue (Cupido comyntas)
10 Summer Azure (Celastrina neglecta)
34 Great Spangled Fritillary (Speyeria cybele)
1 Common Buckeye (Junonia coenia)
6 Milbert's Tortoiseshell (Aglais milberti)
8 Red Admiral (Vanessa atalanta)
1 Hackberry Emperor (Asterocampa celtis)
2 Northern Pearly Eye (Enodia anthedon)
7 Little Wood Satyr (Megisto cymela)
5 Common Wood Nymph (Cercyonis pegala)
7 Silver-spotted Skipper (Epargyreus clarus)
1 Northern Cloudywing (Thorybes pylades)
15 Least Skipper (Ancyloxypha numitor)
51 European Skipper (Thymelicus lineola)
1 Tawny-edged Skipper (Polites themistocles)
2 Crossline Skipper (Polites origenes)
4 Northern Broken-Dash (Wallengrenia egeremet)
42 Little Glassywing (Pompeius verna)
2 Delaware Skipper (Anatrytone logan)
2 Hobomok Skipper (Poanes hobomok)
1 Dun Skipper (Euphyes vestris)
1 Common Roadside-Skipper (Amblyscirtes vialis)

Thank you to Arlene Koch and Dan Kunkle for being the counters in the other areas!

Thursday, June 17, 2010

Monroe-Carbon Butterfly Count

This Saturday (June 19th) is the first Monroe-Carbon Butterfly Count. I am compiling this count as part of the North American Butterfly Association (www.naba.org) summer butterfly counts. On Saturday, several local butterfly-watchers will be scouring southern Monroe and Carbon counties looking for and counting butterflies.

Butterflies that will be counted range from the large, impressive Eastern Tiger Swallowtail:

Eastern Tiger Swallowtail

to the tiny, nondescript Northern Cloudywing:

Northern Cloudywing


Good luck to those counting!