Hesperilla donnysa (Varied Sedge-skipper)
04/12/2016
Clarence
27/12/2018
Bell
17/12/2018
Bell
04/12/2016
Clarence
15/11/2009
Blackheath
29/11/2015
Zig Zag
18/11/2008
Budderoo National Park, NSW
04/12/2016
Clarence
04/12/2016
Clarence
31/10/2015
Clarence
31/10/2015
Clarence
18/11/2021
Bell
16/11/2019
Bell
16/11/2019
Bell
04/12/2016
Clarence
04/12/2016
Clarence
04/12/2016
Clarence
04/12/2016
Clarence
04/12/2016
Clarence
04/12/2016
Clarence
04/12/2016
Clarence
04/12/2016
Clarence
04/12/2016
Clarence
04/12/2016
Clarence
29/11/2015
Zig Zag
29/11/2015
Zig Zag
29/11/2015
Zig Zag
29/11/2015
Zig Zag
30/11/2008
Hat Hill, Blackheath
30/11/2008
Hat Hill, Blackheath
31/10/2015
Clarence
31/10/2015
Clarence
29/11/2015
Zig Zag
30/11/2008
Hat Hill, Blackheath
30/11/2008
Hat Hill, Blackheath
30/11/2008
Hat Hill, Blackheath
30/11/2008
Hat Hill, Blackheath
18/11/2008
Budderoo National Park, NSW
18/11/2008
Budderoo National Park, NSW
14/11/2008
Stanthorpe, NSW
14/11/2008
Stanthorpe, NSW
18/11/2008
Budderoo National Park, NSW
15/11/2009
Blackheath
15/11/2009
Blackheath
18/11/2008
Budderoo National Park, NSW
18/11/2008
Budderoo National Park, NSW
14/11/2008
Stanthorpe, NSW
14/11/2008
Stanthorpe, NSW
14/11/2008
Stanthorpe, NSW
09/04/2005
Newport
15/01/2019
Mount Wellington, TAS
15/01/2019
Mount Wellington, TAS
15/01/2019
Mount Wellington, TAS
15/01/2019
Mount Wellington, TAS
15/01/2019
Mount Wellington, TAS
15/01/2019
Mount Wellington, TAS
15/01/2019
Mount Wellington, TAS
Other Common Names
Donnysa Skipper
Notes
I saw a couple of these butterflies on a hillside at Newport, around an area covered with sedges. They didn’t settle much so I wasn’t having any luck getting photos, until a female landed to lay a few eggs which allowed me to get a couple of shots.
In November 2008 I saw a couple of males hilltopping on Mount Marlay at Stanthorpe, northern NSW. They flew very rapidly, and were very busily chasing anything that flew near them, but fortunately they occasionally landed for long enough for me to get photos. A couple of days later I saw males and a female in a swampy area of the Budderoo National Park in NSW. The female was MUCH larger than the males; they in turn were a lot more colourful than those I’d seen at Stanthorpe, although I unfortunately didn’t manage to get any pics of them.
In January 2019 I saw several males and one female of the subspecies aurantia on the slopes of Mount Wellington in Tasmania, especially in the area around The Springs. This helped soften the blow of me having been unable to get shots of Nesoxenica leprea earlier during the day.
Sightings
Newport – April 2005
Mount Marlay, Stanthorpe – November 2008
Budderoo National Park – November 2008
Blackheath – November 2008, November 2009, December 2009
Clarence – December 2016
Mount Wellington, TAS – January 2019
Links
- The Complete Field Guide to Australian Butterflies (2nd edition) by Michael F. Braby
- Atlas of Living Australia
- Bob’s Butterflies
- South Australian Butterflies & Moths
- Don Herbison-Evans’ Australian Butterflies website
- Tobias Westmeier’s website
- Global Biodiversity Information Facility
- Canberra Nature Map
- Wikipedia
- iNaturalist