You need to be quick as butterflies flutter by
Scottish Wildlife Trust reserve ranger Laura Preston spotted some unusual butterflies at the reserve.
In between all the hail showers this week, seasonal ranger Michael Butler and I managed to spot three butterfly species – including peacock, small white and green-veined white.
The whites can be hard to distinguish unless you know what you’re looking for.
In the UK there are four common species of white butterfly that are frequently seen. These are the large white, small white, green-veined white and orange-tip.
The male orange-tip is the only one that is immediately recognisable by the bright orange tips of its forewings.
Size is not a good determining feature, as you can get small large whites and large small whites.
The number of spots on wings is also unhelpful, as this varies between males and females and between species.
If you don’t see the underside of the hindwing you cannot be 100 per cent certain of identification. If you see a white butterfly quickly fly past at a distance (which they do quite often) it is highly unlikely you will be able to identify it!
When observing the hindwing you are looking out for three possibilities – a butterfly with streaked green-grey wing veins radiating out from the shoulder is a green-veined white.
A butterfly with a blotchy green-grey camouflage pattern all over the wing is an orange-tip.
A butterfly with a plain creamy-white coloured wing with no obvious markings is either a small white or large white. To identify small white and large white, you will need to see the wing tips on the upper side of the forewing.
A butterfly with extensive black marks at the wing tips, with black colour continuing a long way along the outer edge of Picture: Ahh-Yeah the wing is a large white.
A butterfly with less extensive grey or black marks at the wing tips, with colouration only extending slightly along the outer edge of the wing, is a small white.