Surprising Halloween Leps

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David Smith

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Oct 31, 2025, 4:43:44 PMOct 31
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I was surprised by the lep diversity today in my Woodbine area yard given the steady fierce westerly winds and cool temperatures. However, the skies were mostly clear providing ample sun on the remaining flowering plants on the deck and in the garden. I had at least five species of butterflies and not one of them was a clouded or orange sulphur. The species included:

Sleepy Orange
Gray Hairstreak
Pearl Crescent
Variegated Fritillary
Fiery Skipper

I also photographed a skipper that I'm not sure about. My naked eye view of its side suggested female Huron Sachem, but the image I was able to capture is head on with the wings open. Any thoughts? 

David Smith
Woodbine, MD

MD_CLCO_2203FlagMarshRD_2025Oct31_SLOR_Cropped_02_DRSmithDSCN6291_1142.JPG
MD_CLCO_2203FlagMarshRD_2025Oct31_FISK_Male_Cropped_02_DRSmithDSCN6318_1147.JPG
MD_CLCO_2203FlagMarshRD_2025Oct31_UNKSkipper_Cropped_01_DRSmithDSCN6308_1148.JPG
MD_CLCO_2203FlagMarshRD_2025Oct31_GRHA_Cropped_01_DRSmithDSCN6300_1143.JPG

Jeff Pippen

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Oct 31, 2025, 5:04:27 PMOct 31
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Nice photos, David.

Your sulphur is a Sleepy Orange, and yes, your skipper is a “Sachem”, whatever common name you want to call Atalopedes huron these days  😊

Happy Halloween y’all!

Jeff
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Jeffrey S. Pippen
Mebane, NC
Research Specialist, Georgetown University


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Rick Borchelt

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Oct 31, 2025, 5:20:27 PMOct 31
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I too can’t understand the idiotic decision of iNat to call this taxon a Huron Sachem. There is no other Sachem. We Easterners may have lost the scientific name to the Californians, but the common name stays put. 

On Oct 31, 2025, at 5:04 pm, Jeff Pippen <jeffp...@gmail.com> wrote:

Nice photos, David.

David Smith

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Nov 1, 2025, 8:57:36 PMNov 1
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Halloween was just a warmup for the lep activity today. Temperatures were a bit higher, the wind a bit less, and the sun a bit more. All conditions that increased the butterfly activity today. I had 11 species, which I am sure is a record high here for this date. I had all the same species as yesterday minus variegated fritillary. The best one today was a clouded skipper. Here is the list:

Cabbage White (appeared fresh)
Orange Sulphur
Sleepy Orange
Gray Hairstreak
Pearl Crescent
Common Buckeye
Eastern Comma
Common Checkered Skipper
Fiery Skipper
Huron Sachem
Clouded Skipper

David Smith
Woodbine, MD

MD_CLCO_2203FlagMarshRD_2025Nov01_CLSK_Cropped_04_DRSmithDSCN6353_1157.JPG
MD_CLCO_2203FlagMarshRD_2025Nov01_CLSK_Cropped_02_DRSmithDSCN6348_1155.JPG

David Smith

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Nov 3, 2025, 10:52:07 PMNov 3
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And the late season lep surprises in Woodbine, Maryland keep coming. Today it was a relatively fresh eastern tiger swallowtail; the latest observed here by about two weeks. Seems this guy emerged prematurely. With increasing temperatures through Wednesday, who knows what else will appear.

David Smith
Woodbine, MD

MD_CLCO_2203FlagMarshRD_2025Nov01_ETSW_Male_Dorsum_Cropped_01_DRSmithDSCN6516_1194.JPG
MD_CLCO_2203FlagMarshRD_2025Nov01_ETSW_Male_Dorsum&Venter_Cropped_01_DRSmithDSCN6508_1195.JPG

Rick Borchelt

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Nov 4, 2025, 10:03:01 AMNov 4
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It's not unusual for some small percentage of a population to throw out these late-season individuals. Most will die without issue, of course, But it's the long game: It may help to build resilience into populations to cope with changing climate regimes (who knows? maybe partial fourth broods of Eastern Swallowtails will be a regular "thing" in a warming climate).  This strategy seems to have worked for Sleepy Orange, populations of which used to be replenished by northward migration every summer but which is now a regular overwintering species here over the last  decade or so. 



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Rick Borchelt
College Park, MD
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Jeff Cagle

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Nov 7, 2025, 4:57:04 AMNov 7
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They apparently listened - the common name is now Huron Skipper (Huron Sachem)
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