Summary[edit] Description: English: Plate: Mycalesis VI Mycalesis milyas. Fig. 34. Accepted as Bicyclus milyas (Hewitson, 1864). Date: 1864. Source: Illustrations of new species of exotic butterflies: selected chiefly from the collections of W. Wilson Saunders and William C. Hewitson. Volume IV. John van Voorst, London. Internet Archive[1]. Accepted names from Markku Savela[2]. Author: William Chapman Hewitson (1806–1878) . . Alternative names: Hewitson; W. C. Hewitson. Description: British naturalist and illustrator. Date of birth/death: 9 January 1806 28 May 1878 . Location of birth: Newcastle-upon-Tyne. Authority control: : Q2380448VIAF: 32757304ISNI: 0000 0000 8217 9657LCCN: n84171604Open Library: OL2075012AOxford Dict.: 13148GND: 116785330SUDOC: 078630630Koninklijke: 070552517WorldCat. creator QS:P170,Q2380448.
Summary[edit] Description: English: Female Bicyclus anynana (Lepidoptera, Nymphalidae), dry season form from a lab strain (Louvain-La-Neuve, Belgium) Français : Bicyclus anynana femelle (Lepidoptera, Nymphalidae), forme de saison sèche issue d'une souche de laboratoire (Louvain-La-Neuve, Belgique). Date: 17 February 2011, 01:23:00. Source: Own work. Author: Gilles San Martin.
Androconial spot on the hind wing of the african butterfly Bicyclus anynana. Androconia are scales of lepidoptera that are specialized for the dispersion/production of sexual pheromones. The term is generally used for males only (but some authors seems to use it also for females). The yellow hairs that cross the picture are part of a hair pencil that has been removed for the picture. This hair pencil also play a role in the dispersion of the sexual scent.scale : image width = 1.7 mmTechnical settings : - focus stack of 60 images- microscope objective (Nikon achromatic 10x 160/0.25) on bellow
Summary[edit] Description: English: Female Bicyclus anynana (Lepidoptera, Nymphalidae), dry season form from a lab strain (Louvain-La-Neuve, Belgium) Français : Bicyclus anynana femelle (Lepidoptera, Nymphalidae), forme de saison sèche issue d'une souche de laboratoire (Louvain-La-Neuve, Belgique). Date: 17 February 2011, 02:26:54. Source: Own work. Author: Gilles San Martin.
Head of the the caterpillar of the African butterfly Bicyclus anynana (frontal view).This species is used as model organism in evolutionnary biology research.Scale : head capsel width = 5.5 mmTechnical settings : - focus stack of 46 images - microscope objective (Nikon achromatic 10x 160/0.25) directly on the body (30 mm extension from the adapter)
Summary[edit] Description: English: Adalbert Seitz Die Gross-Schmetterlinge der Erde 13: Die Afrikanischen Tagfalter. Plate XIII 28*Bicyclus campina (Aurivillius, 1901). Date: 1910. Source: https://archive.org/stream/diegrossschmett13seit#page/n65/mode/1up. Author: Adalbert Seitz died 1938 author of plate unknown. Other versions: : This file has been extracted from another file: SeitzFaunaAfricanaXIIITaf28.JPG : .
The center pupil of the so called anterior "eyespot" on the fore wing of the African butterfly Bicyclus anynanascale : diameter of the white pupil : 0.35 mmTechnical settings : - focus stack of 29 images- microscope objective (Nikon achromatic 10x 160/0.25) on bellow
Summary[edit] Description: Bicyclus campina campina English: Chirinda bush brown in Chirinda Forest, near Mount Selinda, eastern Zimbabwe. It was first described from “Mashuna Land, Umtali”, which would be somewhere in the Eastern Highlands. They fly near the ground and generally keep to the interior of forest thickets. (Pringle, et al., 1994). Date: 27 December 2011. Source: Own work. Author: Bart Wursten. Permission(Reusing this file): The image was taken by Bart Wursten who releases it under the terms below. JMK (talk) 14:09, 4 December 2014 (UTC).