Theclinesthes onycha (Cycad Blue)
11/11/2008
Brisbane Botanic Gardens
22/11/2014
Blackheath
22/11/2014
Blackheath
22/11/2014
Blackheath
13/04/2013
Mount Sugarloaf
13/04/2013
Mount Sugarloaf
31/03/2012
Mount Sugarloaf
25/06/2011
Mount Sugarloaf
25/06/2011
Mount Sugarloaf
25/06/2011
Mount Sugarloaf
25/06/2011
Mount Sugarloaf
25/06/2011
Mount Sugarloaf
25/06/2011
Mount Sugarloaf
21/11/2010
Mount Sugarloaf
21/11/2010
Mount Sugarloaf
21/11/2010
Mount Sugarloaf
11/11/2008
Brisbane Botanic Gardens
11/11/2008
Brisbane Botanic Gardens
11/11/2008
Brisbane Botanic Gardens
11/11/2008
Brisbane Botanic Gardens
11/11/2008
Brisbane Botanic Gardens
04/12/2004
Mount Annan
04/12/2004
Mount Annan
11/11/2008
Brisbane Botanic Gardens
11/11/2008
Brisbane Botanic Gardens
04/12/2004
Mount Annan
04/12/2004
Mount Annan
04/12/2004
Mount Annan
24/03/2016
Cairns
24/03/2016
Cairns
11/06/2022
Kuranda
11/06/2022
Kuranda
13/03/2017
Cairns
13/03/2017
Cairns
20/11/2013
Cairns
20/11/2013
Cairns
20/11/2013
Cairns
23/11/2013
Cairns
07/09/2008
Cairns
14/09/2008
Cairns
14/09/2008
Cairns
Other Common Names
Onycha Blue
Notes
This species is very similar to T. miskini. If I’d found my first specimen sitting in the middle of a field I’d probably have taken ages to decide which species it was. But in this case, I was immediately confident it was a Cycad Blue, because I found it sitting on a cycad. It was in the Mount Annan Botanic Garden; in one section of their Terrace Garden there is a bed of cycads, and I found this butterfly resting on Macrozamia lucida, according to the sign at the bottom of the plant.
After I’d taken a few photos, it flew off rapidly, but it soon settled on the ground nearby, and I was able to get some more shots.
I was pleased to find this butterfly, because every time I go to Mount Annan I always check the cycads for this species. I never really expected to see it there, as it’s not a very big bed of cycads, so it was a pleasant surprise. I’ve never seen onycha there since then.
In the Brisbane Botanic gardens these butterflies were really hammering the foreign cycads in the more ornamental part of the gardens, though strangely enough they did not seem to be going anywhere near the native cycads in the Australian Bush areas!
Sightings
Mount Annan Botanic Garden – December 2004
Cairns – September 2008
Brisbane Botanic Gardens, QLD – November 2008
Beerwah, QLD – November 2008
Mount Sugarloaf, NSW – November 2010, December 2010, February 2011
Links
- The Complete Field Guide to Australian Butterflies (2nd edition) by Michael F. Braby
- Atlas of Living Australia
- Bob’s Butterflies
- Global Biodiversity Information Facility
- Pam’s Butterflies
- Australian Nature Photography
- Brisbane Insects
- Tobias Westmeier’s website
- Butterflies and Other Invertebrates
- iNaturalist