Then
on Monday be on your way! Must travel with
American Airlines on January 4th of London-Miami to La
Paz.
I
travel with Peter Møllmann from Copenhagen. This
is my sixth - and Peter's seventh trip to the
Yungas, Bolivia.
Here link to Bolivia tour 2010 on Naturephotos.dk: Mariposas de
Bolivia, 2010.
There
is no description and discovery date, but it
comes!
Lars Andersen on Jatata inn
hotel, Caranavi, Yungas d. 18 january 2010. Photographer; Lars Andersen
Sayaca Tanager, Thraupis sayaca. Caranavi, Yungas d. 8 january 2010. Photographer; Lars Andersen ID from Geoff Barter
Caranavi, Yungas d. 22 january
2010.
Photographer; Lars Andersen
Formiana maenades. Caranavi,
Yungas d. 24 January 2010. Photographer; Lars Andersen
January
14, 2018; Today, on
the Finnish website Lepidoptera and some
other life forms
by Markku
Savela, I managed to
identify this beautiful yellow / black butterfly.
Think it would take almost 11 years since I first
saw it in Caranavi February 2007.
Otherwise, I would not have worked with it, who
had given up a long time to find it. But that was
because I received a mail some days ago asking
them to borrow a picture of this distinctive
butterfly.
Link to
fotos from Hotel Esmeralda, Coroico, Yungas, Bolivia
Sandfly, Lutzomyia
longipalpis. Caranavi, Yungas,
Bolivia d. 24
january 2010.
Photographer; Lars Andersen
Sandflies, Phlebotominae are a subfamily of the family Psychodidae. In several countries their
common name is sandfly, but that name is applied
to other insects as well. The Phlebotominae include many genera of blood-feeding
(hematophagous) flies, including the primary
vectors of leishmaniasis, bartonellosis and pappataci fever. More about Sandfly, Lutzomyia
longipalpis.
Sand Fly, Phlebotominae species. Caranavi, Yungas, Bolivia d. 24 january 2010. Photographer; Lars Andersen
Spider
Hawk in the genera Pepsis and Hemipepsis in the
family Pompilidae (spider
wasps). Caranavi, Yungas, Bolivia january
2010. Photographer; Lars
Andersen