Scottish Daily Mail

THE BUTTERFLY EFFECT

Small changes can help these creatures thrive in your garden

- NIGEL COLBORN

HOW could we not love butterflie­s? They do no harm, apart from the cabbage munchers and even those are beautiful insects. Everyone admires the gaudy species, but even the dowdy ones are fascinatin­g.

Among those, the sub-fusc Meadow Brown seldom receives a second glance. But study its underside and you’ll see a prominent black spot with a small white dot, just off-centre. That shows as a menacing eye and deters predators.

False eyes and fancy patterns give butterflie­s and moths their beauty. But the marks are there for a purpose and that makes them even more interestin­g. Butterflie­s are always more abundant in a wildlife-friendly garden. So if yours is insect-rich, songbirds, hedgehogs and other beneficial creatures will thrive.

The year’s first yellow Brimstone butterfly tells us spring is coming. The first frail orangetip confirms that summer won’t be far behind. Butterflie­s feasting on a July buddleja double that plant’s beauty.

If butterflie­s are abundant in your garden, it’s good for other wildlife, too. To attract more, small changes can make a whopping difference.

A PERMANENT HOME

OVER the past 18 years, I’ve recorded 22 of the 57 resident British butterfly species in our garden. Among those, 14 breed on our premises. I think those numbers have grown because of the right habitat.

To welcome more butterflie­s, grow plenty of nectar-rich flowers. Buddlejas are the strongest attractors, but lavenders, red valerian and tall sedums are good, too. If butterflie­s are to breed in your garden, they’ll need specific larval food plants. The largest and prettiest residents in mine are Peacock and Small Tortoisesh­ell. They’re buddleja addicts and hibernate in our ramshackle outbuildin­gs.

But the larval food plant for both is stinging nettle; a gardener’s bête noire.

We have scruffy corners so yes, we have nettle patches. But for tiny or tidy gardens, nettles are hardly desirable. Luckily, both species are strong flyers. So they’ll travel to your garden for nectar but lay their eggs on nettles elsewhere.

Our most successful breeders are grassland butterflie­s. These include Meadow Brown, Ringlet, Speckled Wood, Gatekeeper and Small Skipper. They breed in our flower-rich mini-meadow or in areas of rough grass.

TIME YOUR MOWING

TO CONSERVE breeding meadow butterflie­s, delay cutting rough grass until September. If it makes mowing impossible, I use a wheeled brush-cutter. A powerful strimmer is fine if you cut in stages.

To hibernate, the larvae of many grassland butterflie­s move low into the sward. They’ll stay snug and comatose all winter.

Different butterflie­s rely on different larval food plants. So a flower-rich meadow sustains more species, as well as making a lovely feature. A few square metres in a sunny spot will do.

In my tiny meadow, non-grass plants such as clover and sorrel increase numbers of breeding species. Visiting butterflie­s including Commas, Dark Green Fritillari­es and migrant Clouded Yellows. Hibernatin­g butterflie­s need dark, weather-proof places. Outbuildin­gs are good, and heavy shrub cover or dry dark corners are also fine.

 ??  ?? Nectar points: Butterflie­s, like the Meadow Brown above, love flower-filled grassland
Nectar points: Butterflie­s, like the Meadow Brown above, love flower-filled grassland
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