Prosotas felderi (Short-tailed Line-blue)
04/04/2021
Lapstone
22/01/2019
Ourimbah
22/01/2019
Ourimbah
01/05/2022
Royal Botanic Gardens
01/05/2022
Royal Botanic Gardens
29/03/2024
Rookwood
22/01/2019
Ourimbah
22/01/2019
Ourimbah
21/05/2019
Mount Annan Botanic Garden
03/03/2024
Ourimbah
03/03/2024
Ourimbah
03/03/2024
Ourimbah
03/03/2024
Ourimbah
21/05/2019
Mount Annan Botanic Garden
21/05/2019
Mount Annan Botanic Garden
21/05/2019
Mount Annan Botanic Garden
21/05/2019
Mount Annan Botanic Garden
21/05/2019
Mount Annan Botanic Garden
22/01/2019
Ourimbah
22/01/2019
Ourimbah
22/01/2019
Ourimbah
22/01/2019
Ourimbah
31/01/2019
Coalcliff
31/01/2019
Coalcliff
10/01/2016
Mooney Mooney
10/01/2016
Mooney Mooney
27/04/2013
Mount Annan Botanic Garden
27/04/2013
Mount Annan Botanic Garden
10/03/2013
Mooney Mooney
28/06/2008
Royal Botanical Gardens
15/05/2011
Mount Annan Botanic Garden
15/05/2011
Mount Annan Botanic Garden
11/03/2006
Glenbrook
11/03/2006
Glenbrook
21/05/2005
Mount Annan Botanic Garden
21/05/2005
Mount Annan Botanic Garden
21/05/2005
Mount Annan Botanic Garden
23/04/2005
Mount Annan Botanic Gardens
23/04/2005
Mount Annan Botanic Gardens
17/04/2005
Ingleburn
17/04/2005
Ingleburn
03/07/2004
Royal Botanical Gardens
05/06/2004
Mount Annan Botanic Gardens
05/06/2004
Mount Annan Botanic Gardens
25/03/2005
Manly
Other Common Names
Southern Line-blue, Felder’s Line-blue
Notes
I first saw this butterfly sitting on top of a Hibiscus insularis bush in the Royal Botanic Gardens, back in May 2004. It was out of range of my camera, but I found that if I shook the bush a bit, the butterfly would do a couple of circuits and land on another spot, always near the top and always in the sun. So I just kept on shaking until it settled in a spot close enough to be photographed. Although it’s mostly brown, I suspect it’s actually a male, but a rather worn specimen. The underside ground colour was definitely more grey-brown rather than the yellow-brown of the female.
Early in June 2004, I saw several individuals near the exit from the main carpark at Mount Annan Botanic Gardens. They were feeding from the flowers of a shrub called Chamelaucium uncinatum. Although the bush had flowers at various heights, they didn’t seem to want to feed below about 2 metres from the ground, though I did see them land on the ground and on low-level plants to bask in the sun.
In July that year I saw 4 or 5 individuals around a flowering shrub in the Royal Botanical Gardens, right next to the bush where I saw my first specimen in May.
Over the years I’ve come across this species in many places around Sydney, and also on the Central Coast to the north, and at Coalcliff to the south. Mostly there’s a small number of them, but sometimes they can be truly abundant. Once in the Royal Botanic Gardens a line of trees near the Cacti & Succulent Garden was absolutely swarming with these butterflies – they were in plague proportions though I’ve not seen a lot of them there since that day.
Sightings
Royal Botanic Gardens, Sydney – May, July 2004
Mount Annan Botanic Garden – June 2004; April, May 2005, May 2011, April 2013, May 2019
Manly – March 2005
Ingleburn – April 2005
Glenbrook – March 2006
Ourimbah – January 2019
Coalcliff – January 2019