View allAll Photos Tagged cloudless
Not sure why this one had more of a bluish tint and not so much yellow or sulfur color? www.blevinsphoto.com/sulfur2.htm
I say in my bio that one day I'll finally take a picture of my favourite tree. AND I FINALLY DID! I almost sunk into oblivion courtesy of a very surprising marsh area... but it was worth it.
Soon this tree will be ripped down to make way for a new housing estate. Saddens me. I know it's dead. But still. Surely someone will want it in their backyard?
Cloudless Sulphur (Phoebis sennae marcellina) - 22 November 2014 - Cerro Lodge, Puntarenas Province, Costa Rica
I was at Sculpture Park in Seattle on a Cloudless day. I was resting under a tree adn took this shot!
Observing a cloudless sunset while on my commute home from work. Certainly, days are getting shorter at this point. By the time you know it, it'll be Christmastime! Pics taken from around San Jose, CA. (Wednesday around sunset, October 27, 2021)
*“Sunsets are my escape into the reality I want to continuously live.” – Rachel Roy.
2019 May Bright Cloudless and Virtual Clock Tower from Hells Kitchen Clinton near Times Square Broadway in NYC 05/15/2019 New York City Midtown Manhattan Autumn weather New York Times Building no hanging cumulonimbus cumulus nimbus cloud Fall - Hell 's Kitchen Nemo Southern view
Phoebis sennae. I have seen a few of these lately but they don't like to stop for photographs. I managed to get this shot at Zilker Gardens. The flower is a doctorbush, Plumbago scandens.
Aransas National Wildlife Refuge, TX
© WEOttinger, The Wildflower Hunter - All rights reserved
For educational use only - this image, or derivative works, can not be used, published, distributed or sold without written permission of the owner.
A giant cloudless sulphur (Phoebis sennae) feeds on orange jewelweed at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden.
The Cloudless Sulphur (Phoebis sennae) is a small to midsized butterfly in the family Pieridae found in the New World. There are several similar species such as the Yellow Angled Sulphur which has angled wings or other sulphurs which are much smaller.
Kingdom: Animalia
Division: Rhopalocera
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Family: Pieridae
Genus: Phoebis
One of many butterfly shots from the Butterfly House at the Botanical Garden. If this is a giant, I wonder how small the little ones are!!!
See below for one that just pupated (obviously, the larger one on the right). A challenge is to find the fourth larva above :-). Not seen are branch segments from the cassia tree that we thought would be used to pupate. Not so. The larger leaves are from the candlestick cassia, the smaller from the butterfly cassia. Already in the cage are three monarch chrysalises. Hopefully there won't be a conflict at eclose time.