Panama: Morfos, riodínidos y mimics

Por Peter Hall, asesor científico y administrativo de eButterfly. -En diciembre de 2019, con el Covid-19 como un rumor proveniente de China, reservé unas vacaciones de dos semanas para diciembre de 2020 en Panamá para mi esposa y para mí. Llegado ese momento, con la pandemia en todo el mundo, las instalaciones del alojamiento ecológico que reservé amablemente nos permitieron posponer nuestro viaje por un año más. Cuando llegó noviembre de 2021 y los números de Covid habían disminuido en Ontario y Panamá, decidí tomar un vuelo a Panamá desde Toronto a fines de mes. Resulta que aprovechamos una ventana de oportunidad de dos semanas antes de que Omicron comenzara a cerrar el mundo nuevamente.

Climate Generalist Butterflies Expected to be Winners Under Climate Change in Canada

Forecasting species responses to climate change is integral to the development of adaptive and practical conservation decisions. Butterflies are climate-constrained in at least two ways, as ectotherms, the climate has a defining role in dictating where butterflies can live. Additionally, a warming climate may have huge impacts on their host plant availability. These constraints could mean certain butterfly species may have to move north, or up in elevation, to stay within their preferred temperature range. Predicting how butterflies might respond to such temperature and host plant shifts could inform decisions involving conservation prioritization, species management, and natural resource management.

(English) A Giant Leap for a Butterfly in Vermont and Beyond

(English) In 2010 when the largest butterfly in North America fluttered among Ardys Fisher’s flowers at the end of July, she knew it was something neat. Now, our study published in Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution this week shows an unusually rapid northward range shift by the Eastern Giant Swallowtail over the last two decades.