Reader Ruth Berger sent some butterfly photos taken last year in Germany. Her captions and IDs are indented, and you can enlarge Ruth’s photos by clicking on them.
Here are some butterflies I snapped on my walks on mostly sandy soil near the Main and Nidda rivers in and around Frankfurt, Germany, last year. I’ll start with a good picture (some of the others aren’t that good) of the small copper, Lycaena phlaeas, a holarctic species, on ragwort.
The next not so brilliant photo is of the orange tip (Anthocharis cardamines), whose males are so busy chasing females and each other at borders between patches of woodland and grassland in spring. Only the males of the species have the eponymic orange tip, here visiting the species’ major caterpillar feeding plant, Cardamine pratensis.
Unlike the males, orange tip females look much like any typical white butterfly (Pierinae) from above. The underside of the females has greenish markings similar, but not identical, to the species you see in the next picture, Pontia edusa, here shown feeding on a Centaurea flower:
I saw several species of red-spotted burnet moths this year, all members of the West Palaearctic Zygaena family. These are wondrous creatures, dressed in what looks like a blue black fur coat with a red-spotted cape on top. The following two pictures are of the most frequent species here, the 6-spot burnet moth, Zygaena filipendulae:
The next picture shows a moment from a scene I watched for around ten minutes: a male Queen of Spain fritillary (Issoria lathonia), the biggie on the left, chasing and harassing a small skipper (Thymelicus cf. sylvestris). Should any of the insect lovers here know what might be behind this behavior, please tell me:
The caterpillars of Issoria lathonia feed off Viola flowers. Below, you can see a female getting nectar from a European field pansy (Viola arvensis) in spring, showing its underside that hassilvery-white spots with a mother-of-pearl-like appearance:
Next is one of the prettier pictures, a male common blue (Polyommatus icarus):
While the males have a beautiful upper side of shiny blue (in young animals, the color can become washed out with age), the females of the German subspecies tend to be plain brown with orange spots:
Next is a female marbled white (Melanargia galathea) , a species of the Nymphalidae family that despite its English name has nothing to do with the Pieridae family that most “whites” belong to. The females have a beige/tan hue seen from the side:
The boys are more black and white:
And this one, shown from above, is apparently a bird-attack survivor:












Oooo, these hit the spot – lovely…
What do you mean saying that some of them aren’t that good? They’re all good! Thank you for contributing them.
I really like these! And it’s so interesting to see species that are similar to those in the U.S., but different. My favorite has to be the burnete moth. We have relatives. They are pretty, but nothing like that.
I don’t know why the fritillary was chasing the skipper, other than that butterflies can be possessive of flowers.
Thank you, everybody. Yes, I love the burnet moths too.
These summer butterfly and flower photos cheer me up on a cold winter day. Thanks!
Lovely! Thanks. 🦋🦋🦋
Beautiful photos!