Singing the blues… and other colours

These butterflies have over 6000 species, and here is a collection of what can be seen in and around Valley School in Bengaluru.

There’s no denying that butterflies bring touches of bright colour to a dull, rainy day. At the Valley School near Bengaluru, on Gandhi Jayanti, (2 October 2017) we were singing the Blues…. Blues are Lyacaenid butterflies, which show a bright blue colour when flying (and which is often hidden when they alight and fold their wings.) 

As Wikipedia puts it, Lyacaenidae is the second-largest family of butterflies (behind Nymphalidae, brush-footed butterflies), with over 6,000 species worldwide, whose members are also called gossamer-winged butterflies. They constitute about 30% of the known butterfly species. Some species among them are known to be feeding on ants, and sometimes making ants feed them, by means of a process called trophallaxis.

Here are a series of Blues, interspersed with silver and other colours.

Common Hedge Blue:

Common Hedge Blue Pic: Deepa Mohan

Danaid Eggfly female:

Danaid Eggfly female. Pic: Deepa Mohan

Common Pierrot:

Common Pierrot Pic: Deepa Mohan

Pointed Ciliate Blue:

Pointed Ciliate Blue. Pic: Deepa Mohan

Spotless Grass Yellow:

Spotless Grass Yellow Pic: Deepa Mohan

Bush Brown:

Bush Brown Pic: Deepa Mohan

Common Silverline:

Common Silverline Pic : Deepa Mohan

Zebra Blue:

Zebra Blue Pic: Deepa Mohan

Common Line Blue (on the tiny flowers of the Tephrosia purpurea):

Common Line Blue (on the tiny flowers of the Tephrosia purpurea) Pic: Deepa Mohan

Comments:

  1. Chandra Ravikumar says:

    Thank you Deepa. Beautiful pbotos. From Somanahalli centre to an east-south-west arc with about a 30 km. radius from there, which takes in a large portion of Banneraghatta NP. is home to some of the most glorious, varied, and very large butterflies. The BNP had established a small but attractive lepidopterarium inside the Park. Much fewer people visit there than they do the animal park. Which maybe is a good thing considering their ignorant, boorish and destructive behaviour.
    The Tephrosia plant is a great liver detoxicator and tonic. It is called KsharaPanka. Pick a small leaf. Hold it at two ends give a hard tug, and it will ALWAYS split into two halves, with one side notched into a ‘ V’ like an inverted arrow, and the other half into a sharp arrow point that will fit onto the notch. I have used the brewed tea of the leaves to get my daughter back into condition after an attack of jaundice. I also pick the leaves from my land where it grows wild, shade dry the leaves, and store them for the year. I make herb-tea with them during sluggish digestion days, like during monsoons and after Deepavali.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Similar Story

CIDCO’s new flamingo study raises questions on Navi Mumbai airport safety, wetland future

The Bombay Natural History Society had earlier pointed out that protecting wetlands and ensuring aviation safety should go hand in hand.

The City and Industrial Development Corporation of Maharashtra (CIDCO)'s decision to appoint Australian aviation consultancy Avisure to study bird movement around the Navi Mumbai International Airport has raised fresh questions about the future of Navi Mumbai's wetlands. The agency has cited the ongoing study as grounds to defer legal protection for DPS Flamingo Lake, arguing that no irreversible decision should be taken until the assessment of bird-related aviation risks is complete. But bird movement around the airport is not being studied for the first time. Findings of BNHS More than a decade ago, the Bombay Natural History Society (BNHS) was…

Similar Story

Save Mumbai Mangroves campaign: Who really benefits from the coastal road?

Mangroves are being cut in Mumbai even as the world observes Environment Day. Watch this video to understand citizens' concerns regarding the Coastal Road project.

"We are literally risking our lives with floods. We are a coastal city. To mess around with mangroves is digging your own grave," says Pooja Domadia of Save Mumbai Mangroves, a campaign born in the wake of the decision to construct the Versova-Bhayandar Coastal Road in Mumbai. This mega project is going to impact 45,000 mangroves. The cutting of the mangroves has already begun to make way for the 26.3 km Coastal Road. In March this year, the Supreme Court dismissed a petition challenging the Bombay High Court's go-ahead for the project. But concerned Mumbaikars are not giving up. Save…