Thersamonia dispar (Haworth, 1802) / Yang Hong [Photography] - Figure 1
Butterflies are beautiful and seductive insects, so many people want to photograph it. But experience tells us that whenever it's cloudy or rainy, you can hardly see butterflies. Even if it's sunny, if it's windy, you'll still find butterflies. Butterflies are also known to fly and be timid. This adds to the difficulty of photographing it, and it is even more difficult to find the picture of butterflies in pairs.
Today, I first selected 6 hermaphroditic butterflies from 6 families to display, in order to summarize the butterflies I have photographed in the past 20 years. In the future, other hermaphrodite butterflies will be displayed one after another, which is worth looking forward to. Or add "Follow".
In this episode, the shooting locations of the butterflies are: 1. Beijing Tongzhou Chaoyun River, 2. Beijing Xiangshan Cherry Valley Scenic Area, 3. Beijing Shunyi "Colorful Butterfly" Garden, 4. Beijing Yanqing Songshan Scenic Area; 5. Hebei Fengning Dam Grassland; 6. Beijing Shunyi "Colorful Butterfly" Garden.
▲ Butterfly family: Pieris rapae (Linnaeus, 1758) / Yang Hong [Photography] - Figure 2
Papilio demoleus (Linnaeus, 1758) / Yang Hong [Photography] – Figure 3
▲ Butterfly family: Timelaea maculata (Bremer & Grey, 1852) / Yang Hong [Photography] - Figure 4
▲Ophthalmopodidae: Coenonympha glycerion (Borkhausen, 1788) / Yang Hong [Photography] - Figure 5
▲ Butterfly family: Tirumala limniace (Cramer, 1775) / Yang Hong [Photography] - Figure 6