Field notes, v1733
Page 273
Image from the Biodiversity Heritage Library. Contributed by Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, University of California, Berkeley. | www.biodiversitylibrary.org
Transcription
grateful (Mason C.) May 20 a congruent of the coastal comb, along with Lipline, Artemisia californica and Rhue davicalola. Some of the trees evidently not deep enough to support oak and clump here on imported, interturned mass of Bacularis, Rhue, Bulme gamiflora and R. cridline Donald Dick found two pards, evidently permanent, but could find no sample at them. The most conspicuous animal on the island is the blue swallowtail, Papilio philoross. A moment I counted thirty of these in sight at one time, and could have done this many times throughout Friday. They show all steps of men, from those very balled and scarcely able to fly to newly emerged ones with wings still wrinkled. One of the larvae was found on a tree in a really fair oak. Presumably the vine is a species of Androcharia.