Seen at 1900 meters, higher than the Natureserve range maps indicate for this species. Global warming theory expects species to move to higher altitudes as the earth warms, but most of the temperature change is being seen at the poles and not the equator.
But although I think global warming is the greatest threat facing the planet, I now recall the first time I saw this species was in Manizales three years earlier, also at 1900 meters, so it could also be Natureserve is wrong.
Africa (entire continent rather than south of Sahara)
AN
Antarctica
AO
Atlantic Ocean
AU
Australasia (Wallacea (Indonesian islands east of Wallace's line), New Guinea and its islands, Australia, New Zealand and its subantarctic islands, the Solomons, New Caledonia, and Vanuatu)
PAL
Eurasia (Europe, Asia from the Middle East through central Asia north of the Himalayas, Siberia and northern China to Japan)
IO
Indian Ocean
LA
Latin America (Middle and South America)
MA
Middle America (Mexico through Panama)
NA
North America (includes the Caribbean)
NO
Northern oceans
OR
Oriental Region (South Asia from Pakistan to Taiwan, plus Southeast Asia, the Philippines, and Greater Sundas)