Trapezites eliena (Orange Ochre)
Other Common Names
Eliena Skipper
Notes
When I first spotted one, it was fluttering around by the side of the path, looking for a place to hide because the sun had just gone in. I got a few pictures of it with its wings closed, some of which were a bit out of focus because the light wasn’t that great. A few minutes later, when the sun came out again, I got a couple more photos as it basked on a piece of grass.
A week later, I saw another one in an area close to where I’d seen the first one. This second specimen was much more worn and battered than the original.
I only saw the occasional specimen at Ingleburn, but at Glenbrook I saw a number of them in September 2005. They were not easy to photograph, mainly because they were continually taking off to chase away some other butterfly.
I saw them in many places around Brisbane in November 2008 – they seemed to turn up in just about every area of bushland I visited, except for the mangrove swamps!
Sightings
Ingleburn Reserve – October, December 2004; March 2005
Glenbrook, Lower Blue Mountains – September 2005, September 2008
Just about everywhere around Brisbane – November 2008
Duffys Forest – September 2019
Links
- The Complete Field Guide to Australian Butterflies (2nd edition) by Michael F. Braby
- Atlas of Living Australia
- Don Herbison-Evans’ Australian Butterflies website
- South Australian Butterflies & Moths
- Australian Nature Photography
- Brisbane Insects
- Global Biodiversity Information Facility
- Canberra Nature Map
- iNaturalist
- Learn About Butterflies