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This is a project of the Xerces Society, working in collaboration with the IUCN SSC Firefly Specialist Group and New Mexico BioPark Society.
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Thank you for submitting this firefly observation! Based on the later-evening display time and the green flash color, this appears to have been a firefly in the genus Photuris, but it is difficult to confirm without photos.
I realize that “Flash location” is an ambiguous question! It is intending to ask where in the habitat the flashes were seen (eg. up in the treetops, low over the grass, over wetland vegetation…).
A note about flash pattern terminology:
“Flash pattern period” refers to the number of seconds between the start of a flash pattern and the start of the next repetition of that flash pattern. For example, Photinus pyralis typically has a flash pattern period of 5-7 seconds.
“Flash duration” is how long each flash lasts. Usually this is too fast to measure accurately, but you can estimate whether it is more or less than 0.5 seconds, you can enter “not recorded,” or you can do a verbal description (such as “very brief”).
“Flash interval” refers to the time between the end of one flash and the beginning of the next. In species with single flash patterns and short flash durations, this is basically the same as “flash pattern period,” just a little shorter.