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Early Summer Butterflies
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May is wonderful month in
any garden – full of the promise of summer but still with the
green lushness of spring. In the countryside and the
wildlife garden, the breeding activity of birds and small
mammals may be tailing off a little but many of our butterfly
species are still in the throws of mating and laying eggs.
May is an intermediate month for butterflies with both spring
and summer species around. If your garden is
butterfly friendly with plenty of nectar and larval food
plants to attract these insects, you could see a good variety
this month including the spring species such as orange tip and
brimstone, together with the first of the summer butterflies,
such as common blue and small copper. |
Our native butterflies have
varying strategies to help them through the winter months.
The brimstone hibernates as an adult insect deep in
vegetation, ready to fly as soon as the sun shines in March or
even February. Small tortoiseshell, another of the early
fliers, over-winters in garages and sheds or under loose bark
on fence posts or logs. Other species, such as the large and
small whites, spend the winter as pupae, safe from the worst
of the weather, and the common blue survives the cold
conditions as a tiny caterpillar sheltering deep in ground
level vegetation. The whites will emerge as fully-fledged
adults in April or May while the common blue larva will
complete its transformation in May or early June. However,
other butterfly species that appear in our gardens this month
have not spent the winter here at all, and reach us in late
spring having flown across the Continent, an extraordinary
fact that many people are unaware of. We are used to the idea
that birds migrate between countries, often over vast
distances, but few of us appreciate that some insects also
perform these feats of endurance – especially butterflies and
moths. |
Our winters are too cold
for these migrant species and sadly once here few return to
the Continent or North Africa. However, while they are
here, they produce another generation of butterflies to grace
both our gardens and our countryside. The red admiral is one
of our most recognisable butterflies, its stunning pattern of
red, black and white making it a firm favourite with many
people. A few individuals of this species do spend the
winter here in hibernation, and others migrate in the autumn
back across the Channel to Europe (they are sometimes seen
from cross Channel ferries!) but by and large they are unable
to survive our varying winter conditions except in the warm
Southwest. In its Central Europe home, this butterfly
hibernates where winter temperatures are consistently very
cold whereas many insects that hibernate in the British Isles
are fooled into untimely emergence when temperatures fluctuate
early in the year. A few warm days in February are
enough to waken a red admiral, but this early emergence
usually spells disaster. With no nectar available and
fat reserves used up, the survival of these individuals is
doubtful. February mild spells are often followed by
harsh weather, which finishes off many butterflies that have
emerged early from hibernation. |
We are most likely to see large
numbers of the red admiral in late summer or early autumn.
These are the offspring of those that made the migration in
the spring – the progeny of the insects that you may be seeing
in your garden this month. On arrival, these intrepid flyers
will feed, taking nectar from whatever early summer sources
are available. After mating, eggs are laid on nettle leaves
and the tiny black, spiky caterpillars are sometimes obvious
from the webs of silk they produce, which stick the edges of
the nettle leaves together. They feed and pupate inside this
protective tent, emerging in summer to grace our gardens until
the first frosts arrive. During the summer these insects are
especially attracted to Buddleia, Michaelmas daisies and
Vebena venosa. They also enjoy the nectar from late ivy
flowers and the juices of rotten fruit. |
If the conditions are good we
should also see another migrant species this month. The
painted lady is a butterfly that is unable to over-winter at
all here. It simply does not have a hibernation stage in its
life cycle, relying on a continuous succession of breeding in
North Africa and Arabia where it is resident. However, large
numbers of this insect can reach our shores in some years,
especially if the weather conditions and prevailing winds are
favourable. 1996 was an amazing ‘painted lady year’ when it
was just about the most common butterfly around. Huge numbers
of this butterfly arrived on our shores in May and June and
moved northwards throughout the country dominating Buddleias
and other favourite nectar plants such as thistles and the
wild field scabious. Unfortunately 2004 was a poor year for
the painted lady, as the weather conditions simply did not
suit its requirements, but we never know until migration
starts just what sort of influx there might be. |
On arrival on our shores in late
spring, painted ladies seek out thistles, their preferred
larval food plant, on which to lay their eggs. Nettles will
also be used - these are also the larval food plant of red
admiral, small tortoiseshell and sometimes the comma.
Fortunately there is generally no shortage of these plants on
farmland and roadsides. This means that the painted lady has
plenty of opportunities to breed and in good years there can
be huge ‘home-grown’ numbers of this beautiful butterfly. The
caterpillars are much like those of the red admiral being
black and spiny, and they also produce a tent of leaves in
which to shelter. After pupation these butterflies emerge in
the summer months to feed on Buddleia. They also enjoy the
nectar from scabious and statice. Sadly the majority of these
individuals perish unless weather conditions enable them to
make the long journey back to Europe and North Africa.
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Throughout the summer other
butterflies along with these two species migrate across the
Channel to our shores. The bad news for those amongst us who
grow Brassicas, is that the large white is one of these
travelling insects. They too can arrive in the summer in
large numbers, boosting our homebred insects. Rather less
problematic is the wonderful clouded yellow, a bright
butterfly that again can produce massive influxes of
individuals. Migrant moths are also very common, although
less often seen by most of us. Only the day-flying
hummingbird hawk moth regularly reveals itself to observant
gardeners, feeding on tobacco plants, phlox and honeysuckle.
The phenomenon of insect
migration means that some species of butterfly are a great
deal more mobile than we might realise. This is good news for
those of us who like seeing these insects in our gardens –
their mobility means that there is always a chance of catching
a glimpse of a rare clouded yellow, or seeing a group of red
admirals feeding on fallen plums beneath a tree. |
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© Text and photographs Jenny Steel 2017 |
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