Butterfly watching

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Butterfly watching (also called butterflying) is a hobby concerned with the non-destructive observation and study of butterflies. There are clubs, handbooks, checklists, and even festivals devoted to the activity, just as there are for birding. The Fourth of July and Canada Day butterfly count, an annual census of species by butterfly watchers throughout North America, is an example of citizen science.

The United Kingdom probably has relatively more butterfly watchers than any other country since membership of the organisations involved is far higher.[citation needed] The progressively earlier arrival of spring throught the years in the UK was documented by the date of first sighting of some British butterflies.

Contents

[edit] Getting started

  • Equipment is simple: low-power binoculars (7x35, for example), a wide brim hat, and perhaps a camera (but that can get complicated in a hurry).
  • A butterfly field guide. Not all butterflies are readily identifiable from color photographs. The skippers, for example, are best identified from set specimens. Most larger butterflies, to the experienced watcher, will give themselves away at some point. The watcher is permitted to take notes in order to make a more based species diagnosis. In addition to the guides by Jeffrey Glassberg listed below, there are literally hundreds of butterfly field guides for the United States, Canada, Great Briton, and continental Europe. No one guide can satisfy everyone.
  • By all means, the butterfly watcher should practice in a well-known butterfly watching area before setting off for Costa Rica, the Amazon basin, or sub-Saharan Africa.
  • The watcher should not slight the smaller butterfly species: these have details in colors, wing patterns, and behavior that well repay the patient butterfly watcher. Moreover, for observing small species in the field the butterfly watcher may want a light folding lawn chair since sitting will help to steady the binoculars.
  • When butterflies are shy, the watcher can observe dragonflies, wasps, and other insects. Fabre demonstrated that patience is often rewarded.
  • Two or three watchers are the most for an outting.
  • Butterfly collections now-a-days (2008) are best left to scientific and teaching institutions. The maintenance of a pinned butterfly collection in glass-topped drawers is demanding of time and money.

[edit] References

  • Dunkle, S. W. (2000). Dragonflies through binoculars: a field guide to dragonflies of North America. New York: Oxford University. ISBN 0195112687
  • Glassberg, J. (1993). Butterflies through binoculars: a field guide to butterflies in the Boston, New York, Washington region. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0195079825 ISBN 0195079833 (pbk)
  • Glassberg, J. (1999). Butterflies through binoculars: the East. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0195106687
  • Glassberg, J. (2001). Butterflies through binoculars: the West : a field guide to the butterflies of western North America. Oxford & New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0195106695
  • Glassberg, J., Minno, M. C., & Calhoun, J. V. (2000). Butterflies through binoculars: Florida. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0195112490

[edit] See also

[edit] See also

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