EDNote:
As far as I can tell working from D. Zimmer's Guide 2001, the genus Lycaenopsis was not part of VN's research, and the species named below does not occur in VN's writings (it is part of the family Lycaenidae, home of VN's beloved Melissas incl. the "Karner Blue". His other main area was the genus Plebejus, in the same family.)   I don't recall seeing Shelford's A Naturalist in Borneo ([1916), T. Fisher Unwin Ltd: London.] on any of VN's lists, but it is the kind of thing he read in those years.  If it is a conscious reference, the concealment is most appropriate--and invites learning more about Shelford's mimicry work.   Speaking of the Karner Blue, did anyone else notice that the Nature Conservancy used this endangered butterfly for its fundraising campaign last fall --but without any mention of Nabokov, alas!~SB

-------- Original Message --------
Subject: More on Shelford
Date: Thu, 25 Jan 2007 09:02:49 -0800
From: Matthew Roth <mroth@MESSIAH.EDU>
To: NABOKV-L@LISTSERV.UCSB.EDU
CC: Matthew Roth <mroth@MESSIAH.EDU>


Sorry for the double posting.

Among the species named after Shelford is the Celarchus shelfordii, a blue
butterfly in the Lycaenopsis-group. This was VN's special area, was it
not? So perhaps this has all been covered in Nabokov's Butterflies?

MR




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