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Topic: Blotched Emerald


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In the News (Fri 1 Jan 10)

  
  Emerald Tree Boa Organization - Corallus caninus - Morphs
Dark emerald to forest green animals displaying the highest number of clean white markings surrounded by highly defining darker bordering scales are judged to be of superior confirmation.
As with all emeralds, bluish lateral striping in the transitional area between the dorsal and ventral scales may be present as well as white or yellow lateral markings.
This unusual form displays normal northern emerald scalation and vertebral markings set against an unusually high yellow to green ratio pervasive throughout its ground color True fl pigmentation may be present along the dorsal and lateral surfaces but not in high density.
www.emeraldtreeboa.org /daemons/morphs.htm   (1817 words)

  
 Care Sheets
Most emerald tree boas prefer to sit on perches, which are roughly the thickness of their body's widest part but will also sit on differing sizes of perches from really large to really small in diameter.
Emerald tree boas are crepuscular and offering food at night is when they are most accustomed to feeding.
Remember emeralds are 99.99% tree snakes and one of the few times you will see an emerald on the ground might be after a meal that is too large.
nightbreedreptiles.com /_wsn/page7.html   (6883 words)

  
 EZGeography - Blotched Emerald
The Blotched Emerald, (Comibaena bajularia) is a moth of the family Geometridae.
The wings are green with brown and white chequered fringes and prominent buff and white blotches at the tornus.
The forewings are marked with 2 narrow white fascia.
www.ezgeography.com /encyclopedia/Blotched_Emerald   (145 words)

  
 Brass Jungle Arboreals
The Patternless Emerald is one of the most magnificent morphs of the Emerald Tree Boa.
In our opinion there is not much more elegant and beautiful than a completely patternless, electric green Emerald curled up tightly showing off it's incredible color and vibrant iridescence.
This beautiful morph is considered to be another phase of Patternless, although they do have a distinct fl, blotched patterning that usually continues the entire length of the body.
www.bjarboreals.com /emerald_gallery.htm   (402 words)

  
 Desert Trails II
Emerald Pools Trail: [May 2006] The hike to the three Emerald Pools—Lower, Middle, and Upper, is an excellent way to enjoy the splendor of Zion National Park.
The lush setting of Lower Emerald Pool is a treat for the senses, moisture seeps from the sandstone walls and mist sprays from the double falls, bathing the hanging gardens that flourish in the recessed rock.
Upper Emerald Pools, in our opinion, is the most scenic of the three pools, owing to its large copper colored pool that is surrounded by colossal cliffs, huge boulders, all within a sheltered sandy oasis.
www.naturalbornhikers.com /DesertsII/DesertII.htm   (3241 words)

  
 botany/peperomia
capreata (Emerald Ripples) is a bushy plant that has thick bunches of heart-shaped, waxy, dark green leaves.
Sandersii variety argyreia is small and bushy with short, red stems and oval, pointy, glossy, bright green leaves that are blotched with silver.
acuminata; P. capreata (Emerald Ripples); P. clusiaefolia; P. crassifolia; P. griseo-argentea; P hederaefolia; P. incana; P. rotundifolia; P. obtusifolia variegata (Variegated Baby Rubber Plant); P. rubella; P. Sandersii; P. Sandersii variety argyreia; P. velutina; P. maculosa; P. glabella (Wax Privet) and its variety variegata.
www.botany.com /peperomia.html   (615 words)

  
 White Admiral 47 - SICKLESMERE GARDEN
I start on a depressing note with as few as 6 Light Brocade, Lacanobia w-latinum, appearing between 15 May and 14 June, a total of 42 were recorded in 1999.
A solitary Blotched Emerald Comibaena bajularia, on 17 June, turned up in pristine condition.
Small Emerald, Hemistola chrysoprasaria, was recorded on 7 occasions between 19 July and 8 August.
www.boxvalley.co.uk /nature/sns/wad47/w47-12.htm   (1023 words)

  
 Geometridae
Bluish-grey, russet blotches edged with cream, pale, thin dorsal line.
Greyish-brown, darker brown mottling, body tapers from the fourth segment.
Ochreous, pale dorsal line, darker blotches on fourth to eight segments, tiny warts.
www.whatsthiscaterpillar.co.uk /Geometridae.htm   (417 words)

  
 Breeding and Development of Brochis splendens (Castelnau, 1855)
They had green and fl speckled bodies with orange, white and fl blotched dorsals.
On examination of the dorsal rays they were found to be a Brochis species.
2nd day: approximately 8mm; mottled body pattern; dorsal fin blotched, all other fins clear.
www.scotcat.com /articles/article17.html   (1438 words)

  
 Workshop Thumbnail View | TrekNature
Too active and very difficult to take a photo.
There are more green geometers, but this is the only one showing creamish blotches near the hind edge of both wings.
Because of the bright colours this species is sometimes wrongly identified as a butterfly.
www.treknature.com /workshops/25845   (145 words)

  
 Paghat's Garden: Hedera helix 'Golden Ingot'
It is sometimes greatly grey-flecked almost as though it were peppered, to grey-blotched, elsetimes with nearly no grey at all.
Of the plants I've seen from different growers, it appears to me that when 'Golden Ingot' has gold edges the emerald center is rather evenly ivy-shaped, but when the edges are emerald, the golden center is flecked, clouded, & unevenly shaped, as iis ours, shown in the photo above.
Some of them are so distinct from one another that it can seem odd they're all called 'Golden Ingot' & it might seem wise to acknowledge "forms" of this cultivar (flecked & unflecked; gold-edged or gold-centered).
www.paghat.com /ivy-goldeningot.html   (554 words)

  
 Geometridae: Butterflies
Blotched Emerald (Comibaena bajularia) - Text and Image.
Common Emerald (Hemithea aestivaria) - Text and Image.
Large Emerald (Geometra papilionaria) - Text and Image.
www.infochembio.ethz.ch /links/en/zool_schmet_spanner.html   (491 words)

  
 Moth Names   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
Two rather charming ones that have changed, however, were given to two of our green moths.
The Common Emerald was for some reason originally called the Small Green Housewife, while the Blotched Emerald (recorded for the first time in Cumbria in 2000 by Rob Petley-Jones) was the Maid of Honour (a pun on Honor in London where it was first discovered).
As scientific observation improved and it was realised that many moth species had very specific larval food plants, names were sometimes chosen to reflect this.
freespace.virgin.net /peter.wilde3/mothnames.html   (759 words)

  
 Herts Moth Group
The formerly rather local Black Arches was found to be abundant, with records from two tetrads and double-figure counts on Bricket Wood Common.
Also recorded in the area were Large Emerald (regular in two tetrads), Blotched Emerald, Maiden’s Blush, Small Scallop, Chocolate-tip (almost certainly using Aspen here), Lobster Moth and Nut-tree Tussock (including one of the form melanotica).
Berrygrove Wood in the same tetrad provided Blotched Emerald, Bordered White and Pine Hawk-moth in June and the pyralid Catoptria falsella in August.
www.hnhs.org /mothgroup/newsletters/2000-dec-03.html   (886 words)

  
 LRDG - Leicestershire & Rutland Dragonfly Sites   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
This open area holds a small colony of Dingy Skippers, as well as Common Blues and Ringlets that frequent the whole of the site.
Extensive moth trapping has been carried out in the vicinity of the car park, producing such localised species as Alder Kitten, Angle-striped Sallow, Blotched Emerald and Ear Moth.
As one follows the wide concrete road away from the car park steel rail tracks and the remains of an old turntable can be seen.
www.lrdg.org.uk /sites-new-lount.php   (1113 words)

  
 English Nature - National Nature Reserves - Reserve Details - Text
The diverse moth population includes the barred tooth-stripe, square spotted clay and sword-grass.
Scarce butterflies found here include the high brown fritillary butterfly, small eggar and blotched emerald.
Please note that there are no public rights of way across the reserve and access is by permission only.
www.englishnature.net /text_version/special/nnr/nnr_details.asp?nnr_name=&C=9&Habitat=0&natural_area=&local_team=0&spotlight_reserve=0&X=&NNR_ID=135   (516 words)

  
 Geometers in our garden with lots of pictures.
Curiously shaped Geometer, looking rather like an overgrown moth.
No blotches on the main part of the wings, but the fringes are blotched.
The green and white line is characteristic More...
www.gardensafari.net /english/geometers.htm   (1041 words)

  
 The Moths of Suffolk - 1667 Blotched Emerald, Comibaena bajularia, (Denis & Schiffermüller, 1775)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
The Moths of Suffolk - 1667 Blotched Emerald, Comibaena bajularia, (Denis and Schiffermüller, 1775)
1667 Blotched Emerald, Comibaena bajularia, (Denis & Schiffermüller, 1775)
Distribution and abundance : Reasonably widespread but localised and not too frequent where it is found
www.suffolkmoths.org.uk /cgi-bin/mos/account.cgi?code=1667   (135 words)

  
 Blotched Emerald Did You Mean blotched?   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
Add a link on the top of this blotched emerald page Express submission by secure payment !
Article on Blotched emerald, category, different spelling or sense
Page Blotched Emerald cached on Tuesday 10th of April 2007 11:29:42 AM Compteur gratuit
www.did-you-mean.com /Blotched_Emerald_80e9.html   (280 words)

  
 UTB Moths
New additions to my 206 list were Angle Shades, Barred Straw, Beautiful Hook-tip, Blood-vein, Blotched Emerald, Buff Arches, Double Square-spot, Drinker, Elephant Hawkmoth, Gold Triangle, Heart and Club, Light Arches, Maiden's Blush, Mottled Beauty, Light emerald, Mottled Rustic, Peppered Moth, Round-winged Muslin, Small Angle Shades, Small Emerald, Small Seraphim, Spectacle and Bird-Cherry Ermine.
I was looking for butterflies near Weston-on-the-Green when I noticed a small carpet moth flying over the brambles in front of the flthorn.
Other new records for my yearlist were Light Emerald, Burnished Brass, Small Elephant Hawk-moth, Common Marbled Carpet, Flame, Pale Oak Beauty, Grey Pug, Common Carpet, Dark Arches, Clouded Brindle and Large Yellow Underwing.
myweb.tiscali.co.uk /wendycampbell6/utb_moths_May2Jun06.htm   (6721 words)

  
 Wildflowers to Attract Moths and Bats to Your Garden
Yarrow (achillea millefolium) - Essex Emerald, Lime Speck Pug, Straw Belle, Wormwood Pug, Ruby Tiger, Yarrow Pug, V Pug, Sussex Emerald, Grey Pug, Tawny Speckled Pug, Common Pug, Mullein Wave
Blackthorn/Sloe - March, Common Emerald, Little Emerald, Mottled Pug, Feathered Thorn, Orange, Scalloped Hazel, Scalloped Oak, August Thorn, Brimstone, Early Thorn, Pale Brindled Beauty, Blue Bordered Carpet, Broken Barred Carpet, November, Pale November, Winter, Sloe Pug, Green Pug, Sharp Angled Peacock, The Magpie
Hawthorn - March, Common Emerald, Little Emerald, November, Pale November, Winter, Mottled Pug, Pinion Spotted Pug, Common Pug, Grey Pug, Peppered, Brindled Beauty, Pale Brindled Beauty, Feathered Thorn, Scalloped Hazel, The Magpie, Scalloped Oak, Large Thorn, Early Thorn, Oak Tree Pug, Broken Barred Carpet
www.englishplants.co.uk /Mplants.html   (673 words)

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