Utterly flutterly butterflies

Utterly flutterly butterflies

false - Jon Hawkins - Surrey Hills Photography

Butterflies are a summer delight, flashes of colour dancing in amongst the leaves. Learn to recognise some of our common species, and how you can help them.

A quick movement flutters over the nasturtiums – it’s a gorgeous, speckled wood butterfly flitting through the garden. Brown wings with cream spots, their body has a faint blue-green shimmer if you look carefully when they finally stop to rest or feed.

Butterflies are perhaps our most familiar and loved insects, with a fascinating lifecycle that many of us learn during childhood. They can be easy to identify, with a bit of practise, which deepens that joyful connection we have with them – a mindful moment, as they say on Springwatch.

Whilst some species like the speckled wood have been expanding their ranges in recent decades, others are sadly on a decline. Drought-like conditions are bittersweet as long period of dry weather can result in many of the essential caterpillar foodplants withering. Once common species, including familiar large whites, gatekeepers and wall butterflies are also becoming far scarcer.

Help butterflies at home

There are ways you can help our butterflies flourish; let a few nettles or wild flowers and herbs grow and flower if you have the space. Ditch the indiscriminate insecticides to give these creatures and the food chain that depends on them a home in our gardens.

The Butterfly Conservation’s Big Butterfly Count is happening at the moment; many of us enjoy joining in from our gardens, spending 15 minutes watching and reporting the species we see over the next three weeks.

We've participated in butterfly monitoring for years, recruiting and training willing volunteers to count butterflies at specific points through its nature reserves. Data is incredibly useful and submitted to Butterfly Conservation who analyse the trends and report on the latest picture, to help conservation.

If you don’t have access to a garden, Yorkshire Wildlife Trust has over 100 nature reserves across Yorkshire where you can enjoy butterflies and other wildlife during lazy summer days.

Here are five that you might see in your garden, park or nature reserve.

Large white

Along with other whites, this species is commonly known as the ‘cabbage white’, due to its caterpillar fondness for cabbages. It is a large, strong-flying species, with black on the corners of the wings, extending along the edge. The female has two black spots on the forewings.

Large White butterfly

©Zsuzsanna Bird

Speckled wood

A medium sized butterfly, common and widespread along woodland edges and rides, where it flies in the dappled sunlight, and can also be seen in hedgerows and gardens. Dark brown with creamy yellow spots

Speckled wood credit Martin Batt

Peacock

A stunning and distinctive species, looking very dark, particularly in flight. The upperwings are a deep orange, with large characteristic ‘eyespots’, evolved to confuse predators. Leave a few nettles at the bottom of your garden for the caterpillars of peacock, small tortoiseshell, comma and red admiral.

Peacock butterfly

Peacock ©Terry Whittaker/2020VISION

Small tortoiseshell

Commonly seen in gardens, this small orange butterfly has a forewing marked with yellow and black blocks, with delicate blue and black edging along the hindwings and rear of the forewings. The underside is dark with pale patches on the forewings.

Small tortoiseshell credit Jim Higham

Red admiral

A large, striking species, velvety-black and scarlet, with white highlights. Similar to the peacock, red admirals can look very dark as they fly past but the flash of scarlet and white should help identify it.

Red Admiral © Lynda Christou 2019

Red Admiral © Lynda Christou 2019