Thursday, May 15

A double flat butterfly (Celaenorrhinus pyrrha) found in Sikkim. The state houses about 700 species or butterflies.

A double flat butterfly (Celaenorrhinus pyrrha) found in Sikkim. The state houses about 700 species or butterflies. | Photo credit: special arrangement

Guwahati

A race to see the butterflies has been one of the most prominent aspects of the celebrations that mark the year 50 of Sikkim’s stateity.

Sikkim made the transition from a protectorate to state 22 of India on May 16, 1975.

“We started the 16-day Butterthon, the first event of its specific type for butterflies, on May 1. This is not a speed test, but a quiet race to detect ecologically important butterflies in Sikkim,” Sonam Wangchuk Lepcha, the president of the Sikkim-TPCF Butterfly society.

TPCF expands to Thamblyok Putali Charphamba Famiyap, which, respectively, translates into a butterfly in four languages ​​in the state of the Himalayas: Lepcha, Nepalí, Limboo and Bhutia.

Several lepidoptera, ornithologists and scientists citizens from other parts of India and abroad joined the event scheduled to conclude on May 16, marking the end of the 50s of Sikkim as a state. Participants include Indian Peter Lobo, the American Joseph Coleman Thompson JR and Sri Lanka Indika Upul Jayissa.

Lepcha said foreigners, for the first time, have visited Sikkim specifically to see butterflies.

Butterfly enthusiasts involved in the 16 -day Butterthon in Sikkim. | Photo credit: special arrangement

The Sikkim-TPCF butterfly society said the event had organized to promote the observation of butterflies as a new form of tourism in the state and contribute to the celebration of the “Dorado Year” of Sikkim.

Members of Butterfly society have been helping visitors detect and document butterflies in 7,086 SQ. The jungles of the state of km and the meadows of great altitude.

Around 700 species of butterflies, almost half of the number recorded in India, thrive in Sikkim. Of these, about 420 species or 61% of the butterflies in the state are concentrated in the Dzongu area of ​​78 km next to the Khangchendzonga National Park and the Biosphere Reserve.

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