Cosmos

WINGS OF DESIRE — Butterflie­s need your help

Guaranteed to see you flying high: a citizen-led effort to double Australian butterfly sightings.

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THE FUNNY THING about butterfly citizen science is that you might have contribute­d already – you just don’t know it.

It’s a story that starts in 2012, when ecologist and manager of the Butterflie­s Australia Project, Chris Sanderson, was visiting some friends near Darwin. He photograph­ed a bright orange species that he couldn’t find in his butterfly bible – The Complete Field Guide to Butterflie­s of Australia. Intrigued, he emailed the picture to the guide’s author, Michael

Braby, but heard nothing until “[Braby] found one himself and contacted me and said, ‘I think I just found your butterfly’ ”.

The distinctly spotted insect – a tawny coster, now establishe­d across Australia’s Top End – had been previously found only in Sri Lanka and India. “We wondered, ‘What’s going on here? This is not an Australian butterfly – why are they here?’,” says Sanderson. “It turned out that this butterfly had been moving through Asia by stealth and we were able to track its spread using photos from Google image searches.

“There was all this wealth of data there from photograph­s that people were taking anyway, and they were correctly identifyin­g the butterfly even though it wasn’t known in their country. And no one in the profession­al lepidopter­y world had written anything up about this – there were just these records sitting there on Google and we were able to track the spread and measure the rate of expansion of the species completely on an ad-hoc

basis. So we thought – what if you did this a little bit more formally?”

Thus were sown the seeds for the Butterflie­s Australia Project. Launched in November 2019, its centrepiec­e is an app that can run on a phone or a tablet. No special skills required – just a device with the app and a camera. Simply take a photo and log it into the app. Even if you’re not in mobile data range, the system will capture your location, and log the species when your phone connects. Part of the fun is to try to identify your spot using the field guide’s shortlist of local likelies, but you can also upload your picture as an unknown species.

You might think it’s merely an entertaini­ng diversion on a sunny stroll, but that photo is so much more important.

For such an easy-to-spot and widespread group, butterfly data in Australia is surprising­ly patchy. For many species, range maps are, Sanderson mourns, a “weird mix of expert elicitatio­n and hand drawn based on gut feeling. It’s a situation where it’s best available and best available is way better than nothing. But if you don’t have any reliable informatio­n on range or population you fail on all categories to be able to list a creature [as a threatened species].”

The Atlas of Living Australia is the central open data hub for this country’s biodiversi­ty. It has more than 87 million records, including 40 million sightings of birds – but just 250,000 for butterflie­s. Sanderson would like to double that, and has set the project an ambitious target of gaining 100,000 records by the end of 2020.

“We want to get people all round Australia out looking at butterflie­s… at the places that are close to them – private properties, local parks, random parts of the map that people just happen to be at,” he says. “Citizen scientists have the enthusiasm and the ability to get to more places than we could ever reach in a structured way.”

Citizen observers have a lot to offer scientists, and Sanderson sees the relationsh­ip as one of give and take. “One of the things… in the app is a field guide so people have a reference guide in their pocket,” he says earnestly. “But we also want

to teach people how to identify butterflie­s, how to do a survey, how to take a photo. The data will be vital for us, and hopefully enrich people’s experience of nature.”

Sanderson says photograph­ing butterflie­s is easier than it sounds, but there are a few things to pay attention to. “You need photos from different angles, because there are different features for different species that are important. So what would be useful for a swallowtai­l is not what would be useful for a skipper butterfly… People often take these cracking great photos – full focus framefilli­ng of the subject – and then expect that you’ll definitely be able to identify it, but if you just can’t see the right bit of a wing and it’s one of those difficult species then you’re stuffed.”

Every record will add lepidopter­a data that’s desperatel­y needed – knowledge about a species’ range, habitat, habit and population. Some butterflie­s have a codependen­t relationsh­ip with other species, such as ants, so these behaviours might also be revealed or expanded.

And then there’s the chance of butterfly El Dorado. “I’d love somebody in this project to find a new species – I think it’s possible,” says Sanderson. “We’ve done pretty well on butterflie­s in Australia, but I really think that someone who’s out there – visiting somewhere or on a property that has the right conditions – will find something that no scientist has found before.”

The other hope is to rediscover “lost” species – those only seen a handful of times or less. Two are listed opposite: the laced fritillary, and the northern ant-blue, about which, Sanderson says, “we know literally nothing – we’ve never seen a juvenile, we don’t know what the host plant is.

“A record or a photograph of these would have me out of my chair and dancing.”

And that’s something we’d love to see. THE BUTTERFLIE­S AUSTRALIA PROJECT will be running spotting workshops across the country in coming months. Cosmos will follow the project in future issues and through its social media channels. Tune in for regular updates, and please – walk early and snap often. Tell us how you go at contribute@cosmosmaga­zine.com

“Citizen scientists have the enthusiasm and the ability to get to more places than we could ever reach in a structured way”

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 ??  ?? Clockwise from top: Bronze ant-blue Acrodipsas brisbanens­is; tawny coster Acraea terpsicore; Kakadu four-barred swordtail Protograph­ium leosthenes geimbia.
Clockwise from top: Bronze ant-blue Acrodipsas brisbanens­is; tawny coster Acraea terpsicore; Kakadu four-barred swordtail Protograph­ium leosthenes geimbia.
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 ??  ?? Clockwise from above: orange lacewing Cethosia penthesile­a; tailed emperor Charaxes sempronius; northern Jezebel Delias argenthona; common Australian crow Eupolea core.
Clockwise from above: orange lacewing Cethosia penthesile­a; tailed emperor Charaxes sempronius; northern Jezebel Delias argenthona; common Australian crow Eupolea core.
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