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201202Nov18:59

UK but­ter­fly pop­u­la­tions threat­ened by extreme drought and land­scape fragmentation

Infor­ma­tion
pub­lished 02 Novem­ber 2012 | mod­i­fied 04 Decem­ber 2012
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Ringlet butterflyA new study has found that the sen­si­tiv­ity and recov­ery of UK but­ter­fly pop­u­la­tions to extreme drought is affected by the over­all area and degree of frag­men­ta­tion of key habi­tat types in the land­scape. The analy­sis, pub­lished on Octo­ber 31 in the sci­en­tific jour­nal Ecog­ra­phy, used data on the Ringlet but­ter­fly col­lected from 79 UK But­ter­fly Mon­i­tor­ing Scheme sites between 1990 and 1999, a period which spanned a severe drought event in 1995.

Lead author Dr Tom Oliver from the NERC Cen­tre for Ecol­ogy & Hydrol­ogy said:
Most eco­log­i­cal cli­mate change stud­ies focus on species’ responses to grad­ual tem­per­a­ture rise, but it may be that extreme weather will actu­ally have the great­est impact on our wildlife. We have pro­vided the first evi­dence that species responses to extreme events may be affected by the habi­tat struc­ture in the wider coun­try­side; for exam­ple in the total area and frag­men­ta­tion (i.e. iso­la­tion) of wood­land patches


The UK has suf­fered from a num­ber of severe droughts over the last few decades (e.g. 1976, 1995). Under global warm­ing, the fre­quency of such sum­mer droughts is expected to increase. The intense sum­mer drought in 1995 led to marked declines in insect species asso­ci­ated with cooler and wet­ter micro­cli­mates and sci­en­tists are inter­ested in how to make species pop­u­la­tions more resilient, i.e. more resis­tant to and more able to recover from these extreme cli­mate events.

Our results sug­gest that landscape-​scale con­ser­va­tion projects are vital in help­ing species to recover from extreme events expected under cli­mate change. How­ever, con­versely, if we do noth­ing, the high lev­els of habi­tat frag­men­ta­tion will mean species are more susceptible
Dr Tom Brere­ton, But­ter­fly Con­ser­va­tion, co-​author »


The Ringlet (Aphan­to­pus hyper­an­tus) is a grass-​feeding but­ter­fly com­monly found close to wood­land edges and known to be sus­cep­ti­ble to drought effects. The researchers found that, fol­low­ing the 1995 drought, Ringlet pop­u­la­tions not only crashed most severely in drier regions but, addi­tion­ally, the habi­tat struc­ture in the wider coun­try­side around sites influ­enced pop­u­la­tion responses. Larger and more con­nected patches of wood­land habi­tat reduced pop­u­la­tion sen­si­tiv­ity to the drought event and also facil­i­tated faster recov­ery.

Although many Ringlet pop­u­la­tions did show some recov­ery fol­low­ing 19951996 pop­u­la­tion crashes, the long-​term sit­u­a­tion of the species in some parts of the UK is wor­ry­ing. The researchers found that 18% of Ringlet but­ter­fly pop­u­la­tions con­tin­ued to decline in the sub­se­quent three years. The major­ity of pop­u­la­tions showed pos­i­tive recov­ery, although only 33% of pop­u­la­tions showed com­plete recov­ery to pre-​drought pop­u­la­tion lev­els within three years.

Co-​author Dr David Roy from the NERC Cen­tre for Ecol­ogy & Hydrol­ogy added, “The delayed recov­ery of but­ter­fly pop­u­la­tions is wor­ry­ing given that severe sum­mer droughts are expected to become com­mon in some areas of the UK, for exam­ple, South East Eng­land. If pop­u­la­tions don’t recover by the time the next drought hits, they may face grad­ual ero­sion until local extinc­tion.”


(Source: NERC CEH press release, 29.10.2012)

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