Always forget to post my photography. Here's some from the last few months!

seen from Zambia
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Always forget to post my photography. Here's some from the last few months!

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Tune in next week when I show you how to create the PERFECT dusky eye. Persius, signing out.
Persius Duskywing (Erynnis persius)
Across USA and Canada, rarer in the east
Status: Eastern population Endangered in Canada; protected in some US states
I saw several kinds of butterflies yesterday but the only ones I managed to get pictures of were this duskywing, not sure what species, maybe juvenalis, and this spicebush swallowtail. Winter seemed like it would never end but it’s barely a memory now.
Duskywing butterfly. I think it is an wild indigo (Erynnis baptisiae,) but it could be a persius (Erynnis persius) or columbine (Erynnis lucilius)
Aug. 15, 2017
Southeastern Pennsylvania
@nidfin42 submitted: Hiii the little green dude and the moth (?) were found in [removed], the spiders are from [removed] |||please remove the locations||| the moth kept trying to land on my black t shirt, coworkers got a laugh out of it
Some nice friends! The green fellow is a flatid planthopper, probably a northern flatid planthopper, Flatormenis proxima. The "moth" is actually a duskywing skipper butterfly in the genus Erynnis, maybe a Horace's duskywing. The spiders both look like furrow orbweavers, but the first is a female and the second is a male.

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@winking-owl submitted: No Id needed just want to share some friends
Really excellent friends! I love them all deeply but ESPECIALLY the wasps having a wasp party and the moth with the incredible antennae🖤
@give-bug submitted: I went to a nature preserve recently, lots and lots of nice bugs! I know most of these are too blurry to ID, but North Texas if you can recognize any of them.
Lol took me a minute to even find the bug in the first one. Definitely can't ID that. From there down, though: some kinda duskywing butterflies, I'll assume a mud dauber, tiger swallowtail,common whitetail dragonfly, parson spider, American bumblebee!
@lasagnedegarce submitted: So many butterflies and moths lately! I'm pretty sure they are (1) a snowberry clearwing, (2) Arctic dusky wing, (3,4) a whole bunch of spring azures, (5) an old world swallowtail, and (6) a congregation of old world & Canadian tiger swallowtails enjoying some minerals together. My first time seeing any kind of hummingbird moth which was honestly awe-inspiring.
Wow! A ton of butterfly and moth pals, what a great bunch of friends you were lucky enough to find. All your IDs look right to me! And you’re so right, hummingbird moths are super cool to see irl, they really do look like hummingbirds at first glance. Thanks for sharing!