UK butterfly numbers plunge to new low
16th April 2009
UK Butterfly survey
April 2009. UK Butterfly numbers have fallen to a new low, according to data from the Butterfly Monitoring Scheme.
British butterflies have been declining steadily for years. The new statistics show that recent wet summers have accelerated these declines. Heavy rain makes it hard for butterflies to survive - they can't fly in the rain and that means they can't reach the nectar they feed on. Rain also reduces breeding success.
Summer 2007 - Dire breeding season
The relative absence of breeding during the dire summer of 2007, the wettest on record, impacted seriously on butterfly numbers last year.
2008 worst summer for 25 years
The statistics confirm conservationists' fears that 2008 was the poorest summer for butterfly numbers for more than 25 years. For 12 species 2008 was their worst year since records began in the mid 1970s.
1981 - worst summer on record
The only worse summer for butterflies since the UK Butterfly Monitoring Scheme was set up 33 years ago was 1981. That was the last really chilly summer of recent times when the average peak UK temperature was a mere 14.1oC (57.1oF).
The list includes several once familiar garden visitors whose numbers have dwindled in recent years, for example, the Orange-tip, a beautiful spring butterfly, and the Small Tortoiseshell, which has declined drastically over the last decade. The figures also show that some butterflies are rapidly becoming extinct in parts of the country.
Species causing concern - the High Brown Fritillary, Pearl-bordered Fritillary and the Wood White
Species causing concern include one of our rarest butterflies, the High Brown Fritillary. Dr Tom Brereton, Head of Monitoring with Butterfly Conservation, said: "There are now fewer than 50 High Brown Fritillary colonies in the entire country, many of them small. The recent bad weather has pushed an alarming number of these to the brink of extinction".
Other threatened butterflies with worryingly low numbers include the Pearl-bordered Fritillary and the Wood White. There is also great concern over several formerly common butterflies that have declined dramatically in recent decades, including the Small Heath, Small Copper and Wall.
Indicators of environmental health
Butterflies are important as indicators, alerting us to underlying problems with the environment. If butterfly numbers are falling, inevitably other wildlife is also suffering and in decline.
The main factors causing the long term decline of many butterfly species include the loss of crucial habitats such as flower rich grassland and the intensification of farming methods. A lack of management is also causing problems in habitats such as woodlands.
Butterfly Conservation is working with landowners and other conservation organisations to help reverse declines as a matter of great urgency.
Dr Brereton said: "We just hope that this year we don't have another dire summer and that butterfly numbers are able to recover."
April 2009. UK Butterfly numbers have fallen to a new low, according to data from the Butterfly Monitoring Scheme.
British butterflies have been declining steadily for years. The new statistics show that recent wet summers have accelerated these declines. Heavy rain makes it hard for butterflies to survive - they can't fly in the rain and that means they can't reach the nectar they feed on. Rain also reduces breeding success.
Summer 2007 - Dire breeding season
The relative absence of breeding during the dire summer of 2007, the wettest on record, impacted seriously on butterfly numbers last year.
2008 worst summer for 25 years
The statistics confirm conservationists' fears that 2008 was the poorest summer for butterfly numbers for more than 25 years. For 12 species 2008 was their worst year since records began in the mid 1970s.
1981 - worst summer on record
The only worse summer for butterflies since the UK Butterfly Monitoring Scheme was set up 33 years ago was 1981. That was the last really chilly summer of recent times when the average peak UK temperature was a mere 14.1oC (57.1oF).
The list includes several once familiar garden visitors whose numbers have dwindled in recent years, for example, the Orange-tip, a beautiful spring butterfly, and the Small Tortoiseshell, which has declined drastically over the last decade. The figures also show that some butterflies are rapidly becoming extinct in parts of the country.
Species causing concern - the High Brown Fritillary, Pearl-bordered Fritillary and the Wood White
Species causing concern include one of our rarest butterflies, the High Brown Fritillary. Dr Tom Brereton, Head of Monitoring with Butterfly Conservation, said: "There are now fewer than 50 High Brown Fritillary colonies in the entire country, many of them small. The recent bad weather has pushed an alarming number of these to the brink of extinction".
Other threatened butterflies with worryingly low numbers include the Pearl-bordered Fritillary and the Wood White. There is also great concern over several formerly common butterflies that have declined dramatically in recent decades, including the Small Heath, Small Copper and Wall.
Indicators of environmental health
Butterflies are important as indicators, alerting us to underlying problems with the environment. If butterfly numbers are falling, inevitably other wildlife is also suffering and in decline.
The main factors causing the long term decline of many butterfly species include the loss of crucial habitats such as flower rich grassland and the intensification of farming methods. A lack of management is also causing problems in habitats such as woodlands.
Butterfly Conservation is working with landowners and other conservation organisations to help reverse declines as a matter of great urgency.
Dr Brereton said: "We just hope that this year we don't have another dire summer and that butterfly numbers are able to recover."
