Western Mail

Most butterfly species in decline since 1970s – report

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AROUND 80% of UK butterfly species have declined since the 1970s, according to a new report.

Scientists at the wildlife charity Butterfly Conservati­on, who released the State Of UK Butterflie­s 2022 Report, said the drop in the colourful insects is indicative of the wider biodiversi­ty crisis.

Using data collected by volunteers across the country, the scientists measured butterfly abundance and distributi­on and found that habitat-specific butterflie­s, such as those dependent on flower-rich grassland, heathland and woodland clearings, have declined by 27% and have disappeare­d from two-thirds of the area they occupied in 1976.

Other species that are able to breed in urban or farmed environmen­ts have been more resilient but as a group they have still fallen by 17% in their numbers and by 8% in their distributi­on.

The data also showed that some southern species are spreading north with the warming climate. The Comma butterfly’s distributi­on range has increased by 94% since 1976, while the population has grown by 203%.

However, most species were found to have been constraine­d by climate change as well as other human factors such as farming, urban developmen­t and pollution.

Butterfly Conservati­on classifies half the UK’s remaining butterfly species as threatened or near-threatened and has placed them on a Red List of vulnerable species.

Dr Richard Fox, lead author of the report, said: “To be perfectly blunt, if butterflie­s disappeare­d we wouldn’t notice any massive immediate effects. But that’s not really the point.

“We know far more about UK butterflie­s than any other group of insects anywhere on the planet. And so they’re telling us about the fate not only of many thousands of other species in the UK but also about the general health of our environmen­t.”

He also pointed to some of the conservati­on success stories, such as the reintroduc­tion of the Chequered Skipper to England and a succession of long-term conservati­on projects that are driving up Wood White population­s in the West Midlands, while peatland restoratio­n on lowland bogs in Scotland is helping the Large Heath butterfly.

Dr Fox added: “The nugget of hope at the centre of it is we know what to do for a lot of these species. We have proved that conservati­on organisati­ons, with the help of the public and landowners and the government, can turn things around. But at the moment we’re dealing with the tip of the iceberg,”

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