UK enjoys ‘painted lady summer’ with influx of migratory butterflies
2019 was a year when unusually high numbers of painted lady butterflies arrived in the UK, the annual Big Butterfly Count has revealed.
This summer was a “painted lady year”, with almost half a million of the migratory butterflies recorded as part of an annual count, experts have said.
Results from members of the public taking part in the survey run by Butterfly Conservation have allowed the wildlife charity to confirm that 2019 was a year when unusually high numbers of painted ladies arrived in the UK.
A “painted lady year” is a natural phenomenon that occurs about once a decade, the experts said, with the last big influx of the migratory butterfly taking place in 2009.
Results from the Big Butterfly Count, which took place over three weeks in the summer, show that the number of painted lady butterflies was almost 30 times greater than in 2018.
Peacock butterflies had their best summer since 2014, with a 235% increase in numbers sighted compared with last year, while the marbled white saw a 264% increase.
Red admirals were up 138%, gatekeepers up 95%, and there was a 64% rise in sightings of the six-spot burnet moth, one of two day-flying moths counted in the survey.
And the struggling small tortoiseshell had its best result since 2014, with around 70,000 spotted during this summer’s count.
Butterfly Conservation’s Richard Fox said: “Last year the small tortoiseshell experienced its worst summer in the history of the Big Butterfly Count, so to see its numbers jump up by 167% this year is a big relief.”
He added that the results showed the species performed far better in Scotland and Northern Ireland than in England and Wales.
“We’re still trying to establish what is behind the long-term decline of the small tortoiseshell and, while it is good news that the butterfly fared better this summer, the poor results in southern England in particular suggest that climate change may be having more of an impact on this species than we have previously realised.”
It was less good news for small white, large white and green-veined white butterflies, which all saw their numbers drop by 42% compared with last year, while common blue and holly blue butterflies were both down by more than half.
The experts said these species all experienced a bumper year in 2018, and this year’s drop could be the result of being preyed on by parasitic wasps whose populations may have been boosted by the butterflies’ success last year.