Guardian Nature School Team Contact Blog Project Noah Facebook Project Noah Twitter

A worldwide community photographing and learning about wildlife

Join Project Noah!
nature school apple icon

Project Noah Nature School visit nature school

Emerald-Patched Cattleheart Butterfly

Parides sesostris zestos

Description:

Parides sesostris is a species of butterfly in the family Papilionidae native to the Americas. It is commonly known as the Emerald-patched Cattleheart and the Southern Cattleheart.

1 Species ID Suggestions

eelhsamarie
eelhsamarie 10 years ago
Emerald-Patched Cattleheart Butterfly
Parides sesostris Parides sesostris


Sign in to suggest organism ID

15 Comments

pamsai
pamsai 10 years ago

thanks Jellis...

pamsai
pamsai 10 years ago

Thanks bayucca for your kind words of encouragement. They are much appreciated. And I may have a large collection of butterflies, but the quality of the ones you have, is far better superior. Quantiy verses quality, and quality wins most time, in my book. I have to get a new lens that lets in more light when zooming in the rainforest and dark places! Bit worried about the weight, though! I am not as young as I would like to be, when carrying heavy things around! We shall see! And I'll keep on trying with the ID's. Sometimes I'm inclined to give up I'm afraid.
The 2 examples you gave were easy to see the difference. My problem is how to get to those 2 images in first place. How to narrow down the search. It must be just experience, as I can't find any place on that site to scroll through thumbnails. One just to have some idea of the name to start with. Still, slowly getting there.. THANK YOU!

bayucca
bayucca 10 years ago

Taking great picture is one part of the game and you are a champion. I am jealous of your great collection of butterflies! IDing all these beauties is the other part of the game.
Look at these 2 butterflies:
http://butterfliesofamerica.com/imagehtm...
http://butterfliesofamerica.com/imagehtm...
Please, do not think that I can vizualize these 2 in my brain, no chance! I have to open both and compare by changeing several times the screen to compare from spot to spot, patch to patch. OK, in the meanwhile I know most of the key criterias.
Take this one: http://www.projectnoah.org/spottings/377...
No chance to vizualize, I almost got a headache with "my" procedure.
Take Caligo and Hamadryas... Checking all spots and markings, compare and re-compare, again and again. Sometimes, I just have to give up at the moment due to lack of time for a profound search and comparison (like your Hamadryas). There are many easy ones to ID and there are many, many tricky ones. Sometimes I have not even an IDea where to start my search. And sometimes you really have to be in best shape and mood for ID work.
Please, do not be disencouraged, if you do not find an ID, just trust your eyes and never any library. You are in best form for taking pictures, try to get closer and closer with IDeas (and you are getting better and better anyway) and for the rest, Project Noah is here to help out! And hey, I am really jealous ;-)...

pamsai
pamsai 10 years ago

Ok I added the closed wing photo I think is Emerald-Patched Cattleheart.

And i came across something I think fits me perfectly. The person said, "With my inability to pick up visual differences..." I have never been able to vizualize or hold an image in my head. I think that is why I find it so difficult to compare my photos with the various images on the net. I can't hold the image in my head long enough to compare it with my photo! Feel a bit better now about not being able to ID my photos. Still I'll keep trying, but I'm glad I have bayucca and all the other PN-ers to help me. Thank you all so much...

pamsai
pamsai 10 years ago

Right! Thanks bayucca... Now to sort out the spottings on PN...

bayucca
bayucca 10 years ago

#5 and #6 are probably the same but different from the rest.

pamsai
pamsai 10 years ago

bayucca, I am not sure at all... There were 2 species flying around together. The larger one with a green spot and a slightly smaller one with white spot and more prominent red. Unfortunately I have them mixed up I think. I'll go through the photos again and see if I can clear it up!

bayucca
bayucca 10 years ago

Are you sure that #5 is the same one as #1 to 4? What about 5 and 6 are the same?

Jellis
Jellis 10 years ago

Subspecies Parides sesostris zestos

bayucca
bayucca 10 years ago

Are you sure that #6 is the same spotting?

pamsai
pamsai 10 years ago

Added a photo that shows the red patch on the lower wing that was visible when it was flying.

pamsai
pamsai 10 years ago

You are welcome tmvdh. I have MANY more to add and when I get time I'll add all those moths I uploaded before! I am happy you made the mission so I have somewhere to add them...

tmvdh
tmvdh 10 years ago

Hi Pam, THANKS for adding so many GREAT photos/spottings to my mission!!!

bayucca
bayucca 10 years ago

Sesostris was also my guess, but the missing white patches on the forewing are confusing. I will check this one again.

vivianpoma
vivianpoma 10 years ago

beautiful, wonderful series.

pamsai
Spotted by
pamsai

Limón, Costa Rica

Spotted on Jul 29, 2013
Submitted on Sep 5, 2013

Related Spottings

Parides buttlerfly Parides Butterfly Parides Caterpillar Parides Caterpillar

Nearby Spottings

Crimson Patch Sara Longwing Blue-frosted Banner (female) Spotting

Reference

Noah Guardians
Noah Sponsors
join Project Noah Team

Join the Project Noah Team