It has not been much of a summer for our resident butterflies and the
cool, often wet, conditions will have undoubtedly caused problems for many
species. While a single poor summer, or even a short run of poor summers, may not
prove catastrophic, it can exacerbate the impact of long-term declines brought
about by other factors. The poor conditions tend to have an impact on butterfly
survey work as well, limiting opportunities to get out into the countryside to
locate populations of some of our more under-recorded or localised species.
Three such species are on the wing now; the White Admiral, the Purple
Hairstreak and the White-letter Hairstreak. Of these, it is the White-letter
Hairstreak that we should, perhaps, be most concerned about.
This is a species that has undergone a significant decline since the
1970s, in part a reflection of its association with the various species of elm.
The widespread outbreak of Dutch Elm Disease in the 1970s resulted in the loss
of some 10 million elms, and with them, the removal of the favoured larval
foodplants. The spores of this
fungal disease were carried by bark beetles and transferred from tree to tree
as the beetles moved about to seek food or lay eggs. At the time, experts
predicted that the loss of the elms would be extremely damaging, suggesting
that the future of the White-letter Hairstreak hung in the balance. However,
the predicted sudden and catastrophic loss of the butterfly did not happen,
largely because the butterflies took to feeding on the regrowth brought about
by the elm’s ability to sucker readily; they also exploited some of the more
disease-resistant varieties of elm. As a result, colonies still cling on across
a large part of central and eastern England albeit at a greatly reduced level.
Our understanding of how the White-letter Hairstreak population has
changed comes from regular monitoring work, carried out annually across a
series of sites through the UK Butterfly Monitoring Scheme. What the scheme
doesn’t give us, however, is a clear picture of where the remaining colonies
are located. This is where we, as amateur naturalists, come in. Over the next
few weeks, the hairstreaks will be on the wing and can be spotted making their
erratic spiralling flights around the tops of elm trees. Here they will feed on
aphid honeydew. They will also descend to nectar on bramble or thistles, so it
is worth staking out a group of elms with nectar sources below. You won’t see
the dark uppersides of the wings because the butterfly perches wings closed,
but you might just see the orange stripe and white ‘W’ on the underwing. If you
do, make sure you let Butterfly Conservation know.
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