Wednesday in the Garden: Bordered Patch butterfly
I was out in my garden at mid-afternoon today, a bright, sunny but cool afternoon. A perfect October day.
I had my camera with me and I was taking random pictures of butterflies. There are lots and lots of them in the garden at this time of year. I had the usual Monarchs, Gulf Fritillariies, various sulphurs, and skippers and then I ran across this beauty.
It was something completely different. I had never seen one in my garden before. It is a Bordered Patch butterfly.
My go-to butterfly guide, Butterflies of Houston and Southeast Texas, helped me to identify it. It also informed me that this is not a regular member of this area's butterfly fauna. (No wonder I hadn't seen it before.) It is a tropical species that ranges from southern Arizona and Texas through Central and South America to Argentina. It wanders northward during the summer months, sometimes reaching Kansas and Nebraska. Houston lies at the extreme eastern edge of its range. I feel very lucky to have been in the right place at the right time to get these images.
The butterfly was the only one of its kind present. It was feeding on a bed of marigolds. The guide book says they have a preference for sunflowers. In fact, one of its common names is Sunflower Patch. They like to nectar on white and yellow flowers. Today, lucky for me, this one compromised on a yellow and orange bed of marigolds.
I had my camera with me and I was taking random pictures of butterflies. There are lots and lots of them in the garden at this time of year. I had the usual Monarchs, Gulf Fritillariies, various sulphurs, and skippers and then I ran across this beauty.
It was something completely different. I had never seen one in my garden before. It is a Bordered Patch butterfly.
My go-to butterfly guide, Butterflies of Houston and Southeast Texas, helped me to identify it. It also informed me that this is not a regular member of this area's butterfly fauna. (No wonder I hadn't seen it before.) It is a tropical species that ranges from southern Arizona and Texas through Central and South America to Argentina. It wanders northward during the summer months, sometimes reaching Kansas and Nebraska. Houston lies at the extreme eastern edge of its range. I feel very lucky to have been in the right place at the right time to get these images.
The butterfly was the only one of its kind present. It was feeding on a bed of marigolds. The guide book says they have a preference for sunflowers. In fact, one of its common names is Sunflower Patch. They like to nectar on white and yellow flowers. Today, lucky for me, this one compromised on a yellow and orange bed of marigolds.
Lucky you! You're always experiencing new things in the garden...And us with you. :-)
ReplyDeleteThere are always surprises in the garden and sometimes, like yesterday, they are very nice surprises.
DeleteVery lovely. I've never seen one of these before.
ReplyDeleteI'm on the lookout for them now. If there is one in the area, surely there are others. Perhaps one will pay a visit to your yard.
DeleteYou were in the right place at the right time-what a beautiful butterfly. I've never seen one before, that I can remember (I lived in Kansas for four years).
ReplyDeleteThey wouldn't have been very common in Kansas. I think they only rarely make it that far north. And rarely, in fact, do they make it to this area. I just got very lucky yesterday.
DeleteAny day I see a butterfly is a happy day, even when it is a picture taken by you!
ReplyDeleteI'm glad I could brighten your day.
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