Showing posts with label Lung Kwu Tan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lung Kwu Tan. Show all posts

Sunday, September 10, 2023

Lung Kwu Tan (龍鼓灘) & Luk Keng (鹿頸), Hong Kong

Continued from last post.
Our HK friends were not free on 5 and 6 July, so we were on our own to explore two butterfly hunting sites.

This small Tagiades species was my first shot on 5 July at Long Ku Tan. However, it always landed underneath a leaf, making it very difficult for me to snap a good shot. I was puzzled by the absence of the white outer margin of a normal T.  menaka that I used to encountered. 

I went up the steps leading to the Emperor rock (didn't reach the peak this time) and bumped into this Club Silverline (Spindasis syama) and a rather large dark brown skipper that looks like a Boaris farri.


The Falcate Oak Blue (Mahathala ameria) seemed to be quite common at Long Ku Tan as I spotted at least three or four individuals. 
This looks like the Transparent Sixline Blue (Nacaduba kurva)
The Common Gull (Cepora nerissa) came to feed late in the afternoon at a wasteland where the Bidens flowers were abundant. 
On 6 July, we took the East Rail Line to the Fenling Station and transferred to the green mini bus 56k (every 30 min interval) bringing us to its terminal station at Luk Keng village. On our way to the village, I bumped into this Chestnut Angle (Odontoptilum angulatum) on the road side.
Our first shot at the village was the  Papilio protenor (Spangle) feeding gracefully on the flowers.
We had to take cover at a corridor of a block of apartment while waiting for the passing-rain to stop.
Shortly after the rain, we were very lucky to spot the Lethe rohria.
The Bamboo Tree Brown (Lethe europa) and a mating pair of the Common Palmfly (Elymnias hypermnestra agina) were seen at the vicinity.

The weather turned very hot after our lunch but the number of butterfly species was rather disappointed. Along a forest trail along a slope, we encountered a group of puddling butterflies on a rotten fruit.
We waited awhile, trying to isolate them. The Commo Duffer (Discophora sondaica) refused to go away after the Archdukes were "reset"
A few male and female Archdukes (Lexias pardalis) were flying low and looking for puddling spots .
An underside shot of a female.
In the late afternoon, while walking down the same slope, I bumped into this Chinese Peacock resting on a leaf surface.
This Lethe confusa was surprisingly tame for me to take a few shots.
A few skippers were zipping around. I had to be patient and observant to track them if they had landed.
This should be a Parnara ganga.

Along a cement road leading to the end of the village, a lonely Common Nawab (Polyura athamas) was seen puddling.
The Bidens flowers growing in the grasslands on both sides of the road attracted quite a number of small skippers; they were flitting amongst the flowers. This is the Jhora Scrub Hopper (Aeromachus jhora ).


A Bush Hopper (Ampittia dioscorides) resting on a blade of grass.
Under the hot afternoon sun this Lemon Pansy (Junonia lemonias) was highly active, visiting different Bidens flowers frequently but without a long perch.
Hong Kong has many butterfly-hunting sites that we did not visit in this trip - we will be back again in the future.  

Saturday, May 14, 2016

Butterflies at Lung Kwu Tan (龍鼓灘), Hong Kong

Situated at the western coast of Hong Kong's New Territories, Lung Kwu Tan is one of the hotspots for butterfly-watching and photograpy.

Leaving home early on a warm Saturday morning (7 May), I took the West Rail MTR Line from Hung Hom to Tung Man. After having a heavy breakfast, I met my  friends at Exit C. Another 45-minute bus ride on a MTR K52 bus finally brought us to Lung Kwu Tan village. My total travelling time from my home at Ap Lei Chau to this place was almost 2 hours.



The hunting-ground is in fact a patch of wasteland (abandoned farm land?) at the foothill of a mountain.

The site was quite crowded with photographers when we arrived. I decided to follow the Lung Man Trail and walk up the stairs leading to the Emperor's Cave (but I didn't reach). Along the way, I was lucky to bump into a Mahathala ameria (Falcate Oakblue).
There were many Rustics (Cupha erymanthis) along the trail. As usual, all of them were extremely skittish and alert to movement. With a lot of patience and luck, I finally got some record shots. 
  The undersides.
There were two female Cethosia bibles working diligently to look for the correct plant to lay eggs.
The other female decided to take a short break after a long search for the correc host plant.
Some males were fluttering around and feeding  on flowers , occasionally they landed on the ground.
There were many Bidens flowers at the wasteland. Getting tired of walking up and down the stairs, I stood next to the flowers waiting for butterflies. A very fast flyer, this Common Gall (Cepora nerissa) loved to feed on the flowers.    
A mating pair of Pieris canidia caught my attention when I was resting under a tree.
I noticed there were quite a number of butterfly species  at this place. Feeding on the Bidens flowers with wings wide open,    the Chestnut Angle (Odontoptilum angulatum) presented a nice composition for me to take a few shots before it scooted off to a treetop.
The sighting of this samll Purple and Gold Flitter skipper (Zographetus satwa) in the late afternoon got everyone excicted.  Scooting around with high speeds but  perching on the same leaf surface or nearby, it  gave everyone a chance to snap some shots though from far.  
A glimpse of its markings on the forewings.

A forest denizen I believe, the Graphium doson (Common Jay) was takiing a nap.
It looks like the intermediate form of a Mycalesis species
A Neptis speceies perhaps the N. clinia was hanging around a tree in the afternoon.  
Geeting an upperside shot was a challenge for me as it kept flapping its wings -  this was the best I could get.
Due to its five distinctive five black spots on the hindwing underside, it is quite easy to identify this bbutterfly - the Parathyma sulpitia. 
I managed to get just one upperside shot.
It was late in the afternoon when this Tajuria cippus landed again on flowers but it took off a few seconds later.
The insect diversity at Lung Kwu Tan is good. Apart from  butterflies, I saw quite a number of other insects. I have not shot a Tiger beetle for a long time  When this guy landed on a cement step just infront of me, I instinctively squatted down to snap a shot. 
A small but colourful and interesting bug - not sure what this is.
It seems that this particular species of the  Lantern bug is common in HK as I have seen it at a few trails.
Finally, let me conclude this post with a mating pair of moth. Many of us queued up to take some shots of this beautiful moth.
Though this place is very far away from my home,  the number of fauna species we can find here is worth spending the time to come here again.