I wanted to bring your attention to the Elm Report, produced by Andrew Brookes. This is an excellent publication, and is specifically targeted at assisting the White-Letter Hairstreak. A downloadable copy of the report is available from the Hampshire and Isle of Wight BC branc website at:
http://www.hantsiow-butterflies.org.uk/ ... ation.html
Cheers,
- Pete
Elm Report
- Pete Eeles
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Elm Report
Last edited by Pete Eeles on Sat Mar 04, 2006 8:30 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Elm Report
Interesting although I do not know much about Elms. It is always a puzzle whlist some Elms survive and others are diseased. And why Elm is absent from some areas on the Sussex downs near Brighton. It is town trees and a few lowland ones that survive, whereas all the downs ones are diseased locally.Pete Eeles wrote:I wanted to bring your attention to the Elm Report, produced by Andrew Brookes. This is an excellent publication, and is specifically targeted at assisting the White-Letter Hairstreak. A downloadable copy of the report is available from the Hampshire and Isle of Wight BC branc website at:
http://www.butterfly-conservation.org/h ... ation.html
Cheers,
- Pete
Elms at:
http://www.glaucus.org.uk/NewMonks2005.html
No White-letter Hairstreaks though.
Cheers
Andy Horton
glaucus@hotmail.com
Adur Valley (West Sussex) Nature Notes
http://www.glaucus.org.uk/Adur2006.html
Adur Valley Nature Notes: February 2006
http://www.glaucus.org.uk/Feb2006.html
- Pete Eeles
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I've just posted an update to the report on the Hants and IOW website, at:
http://www.hantsiow-butterflies.org.uk/ ... ation.html
Cheers,
- Pete
http://www.hantsiow-butterflies.org.uk/ ... ation.html
Cheers,
- Pete
Hi! Well how strange is this????? Just this week I have made contact with the county moth reporter for Sussex and I posed him a question about a white letter hairstreak I saw a few years ago - yes he does butterflies too!
I haven't read the report Pete mentions but I will. Just wanted to say though - without knowing that the elm is a w hairstreaks food plant I planted 3 elms in my garden about 3 years ago! I hope that at least 1 will survive (I planted them close together).
Long live the white letter hairstreak in Sussex!
DM
I haven't read the report Pete mentions but I will. Just wanted to say though - without knowing that the elm is a w hairstreaks food plant I planted 3 elms in my garden about 3 years ago! I hope that at least 1 will survive (I planted them close together).
Long live the white letter hairstreak in Sussex!
DM
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- Location: GLOUCESTERSHIRE
They are splendid trees. and were once a very common sight in most counties.metromartin wrote:Its a shame about the elm trees as a I was suprised when I first saw a mature tree how large they can be as most only get to 15'
Martin, there's a superb Elm near the front entrance to Gloucester Royal Hospital in Great Western Road. How it has survived is a mystery. It has small dark leaves when I last looked at it ~ it's quite tall and mature ~ maybe 60+ feet and no sign of any die back on any branches or limbs.
Prior to the area being pedestrianised, Gloucester Cross had traffic flowing in all four directions. One sunny day, I spotted a female White Letter Hairstreak fluttering in the City Centre and it settled on the hot tarmac smack bang in the middle of the busy Cross roads with traffic passing in all four directions. Being centrally located, all the traffic passed it by.... and it survived to fly on.
Years ago, there were fine specimen Wych Elms in Gloucester Park and many others in surrounding areas. All since long gone but those saplings still shoot up and then die back when the bark is sufficiently mature to attract the beetles which carry the fungal spores I believe....
As a schoolboy back in the 1950s, I used to find the pupae on the lower branches of the Wych Elms ~ all those lower branches were at an ideal height to search, being just out of reach of browsing cattle .... any leaves or branches within reach soon got munched up so over the years, all those Wych Elms in the cattle fields took on a distinctive shape low down.
I have noticed that there are huge numbers of fine sapling Elms growing in some parts of the M5 Motorway embankments in the county. These are often allowed to grow to a good size before getting trimmed by the authorities or die back from the fungal attacks. These no doubt support some White Letter Hairstreaks ~ the butterfly has always been widespread in the county and I suspect it also uses Blackthorn for its eggs as I found and reared a specimen from an Oxford ovum found when searching for ova of the more regular Blackthorn Feeding Hairstreaks ...the Black and Brown. I reared a fine female from the single ovum ... it fed up on Blackthorn Flowers which appear before the leaves and move onto the leaves when they appeared.
Cotswold Cockney is the name
All aspects of Natural History is my game.
All aspects of Natural History is my game.