Thanks Mike and Dave. Mike, that chart is very illuminating. I had no idea
there were that many species. Amber seems a good way to describe what I saw as
red. It seems a monumental brain task to sort out all the flashing going on
but just having these different parameters in mind would help
McGraw.NY
From: Linda Orkin
Sent: Sunday, June 29, 2014 2:28 AM
To: Mike Pitzrick
Cc: CAYUGABIRDS- L
Subject: Re: [cayugabirds-l] Not birds-but FIREFLIES tonight
Thanks Mike and Dave. Mike, that chart is very illuminating. I had no idea
there were that many species. Amber
That's a great website for a neat project, Mike! On the discussion board, a
participant (whose name email I have omitted here) asked Linda's question,
and the project leader replied:
In my June 1, 2014 report I reported an individual flying with three flashes
and reported it as orange
Hi Dave,
People do perceive colors differently due to both biological capacity and
training. This is an area of active research.
Regarding biological capacity, most people have three types of color
receptors in their eyes, each of which is most sensitive to a single color:
red, green, or blue.
On the other hand it could have been s very tiny low-flying plane.
Linda
Sent from my iPhone
On Jun 29, 2014, at 10:45 AM, Dave Nutter nutter.d...@me.com wrote:
That's a great website for a neat project, Mike! On the discussion board, a
participant (whose name email I have omitted here)
Does anyone else notice that some of the flashes look like different colors.
Reds and greens. Is this just like a Doppler shift type thing or are they
really like that?
Linda
Sent from my iPhone
On Jun 28, 2014, at 10:43 PM, Anne Clark anneb.cl...@gmail.com wrote:
It is wild out
Some stars look slightly orange or blue, but the fireflies all look green to
me. I think the red flashes are airplanes. Seriously, I know there are
different species of fireflies and they use different codes of flashes, but I
don't know about different colors. I'm guessing they all use the same