SEE ERRATA FOR VERSION 1.0 - Below
To Be Corrected in Version 1.1
Compressed File
Butterflies and Moths of the Black Range and Doña Ana County - Version 1.0 Compressed This file is compressed and is 330 MB in size, meaning the images will be of lower quality - but still quite nice - than found in the uncompressed file. Recommended for most users.
Uncompressed Files
Butterflies and Moths of the Black Range and Doña Ana County - Version 1.0
This file is 2.3 GB in size. Because of its size, this file can take a long time to download and to open. If this is a problem, and you wish to have an uncompressed file you may wish to download the two parts of this .pdf shown below. Once downloaded you can use most .pdf software programs to merge them into one .pdf (you will probably need to create a “new .pdf” composed of the two parts - no other tech advice available).
Version 1, Part 1, Butterflies and Moths of the Black Range and Doña Ana County This file is 1.1 GB in size.
Version 1, Part 2, Butterflies and Moths of the Black Range and Doña Ana County This file is 1.3 GB in size.
The future: Note that the sampler is published as “Version 1.0”. We are embracing the digital media concept here. We will not necessarily wait until there is a substantial body of material to publish changes. Instead, there will be a “Version 1.1” etc.. That means we will publish updates more frequently (all previous versions will remain available).
Given the substantial amount of material included in this publication it is possible that errors occurred in transcription. The editor is responsible for all errors of commission and omission. If you find errors, please report them to rabarnes@blackrange.org so that they may be corrected. Thank you.
Changes to appear in Version 1.1 - or under consideration
and errata for Version 1.0
- Tailed Orange - Some images identified as Sleepy Orange are Tailed Orange (upper right and center images on Page 19, lower left size image on page 20, open winged butterfly on page 21).
- Page 118, Upper left image is not a Funereal Duskywing but rather Meridian Duskywing - note gray or brown fringe
- Page 121 & 122, Images are Funereal not Mournful Duskywing
- Page 124 & 125, Image has checkered fringe so this is Amblyscirtes aenus
- Page 144 & 145, Image at center left is Carus Skipper not Firey Skipper
- Page 164, Bottom images are Ceraunus Blue
- Page 216, This may be a female Sachem rather than Carus Skipper. Review is continuing.
Supporting Material Referenced in This Work
- Kawahara AY, Breinholt JW. 2014 Phylogenomics provides strong evidence for relationships of butterflies and moths. Proc. R. Soc. B 281: 20140970. http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2014.0970
- A Voyage Up The River Amazon - William H. Edwards
- The Butterflies of North America Vol. 1 - William H. Edwards
- The Butterflies of North America Vol. 2 - William H. Edwards
- The Butterflies of North America Vol. 3 - William H. Edward
- Systematics of the butterfly genus Cissa, Zacca et al.
- Genomic evidence suggests further changes to butterfly names
- The Migrations of the Painted Lady Butterfly, Vanessa Cardui, With Special Reference to North America
- A Global phylogeny of butterflies reveals their evolutionary history, ancestral hosts and biogeographic origins
- A Global phylogeny of butterflies reveals their evolutionary history, ancestral hosts and biogeographic origins - Supplementary Information
- The butterflies of the eastern United States and Canada- with special reference to New England Vol. 1
- The butterflies of the eastern United States and Canada- with special reference to New England Vol. 2
- The butterflies of the eastern United States and Canada- with special reference to New England Vol. 3
- The Fossil Insects of North America
- Getting Western: biogeographical analysis . . . Junonia Butterflies, Lalonde & Marcus
- Speciation in North American Junonia from a Genomic Perspective, Cong et al.
- Annotated Taxonomic Checklist of the Lepidoptera of North Americ, North of Mexico