Extinct butterflies in the last 200 years
- Gruditch
- Moderator & Stock Contributor
- Posts: 1689
- Joined: Mon Apr 09, 2007 3:30 pm
- Location: Hampshire
- Contact:
Extinct butterflies in the last 200 years
Saw this article in the Daily Mail, England's lost world: 421 species - including mammals, birds and plants - have become extinct over the past 200 years
Hmm, are some of the butterflies listed fact, or fiction
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/ ... years.html
Butterflies Butterflies Aporia crataegi Black-veined white 1890s/1920s
Butterflies Boloria dia Weaver’s fritillary c1890
Butterflies Carcharodus alceae Mallow skipper c1925
Butterflies Carterocephalus palaemon Chequered skipper 1976
Butterflies Euchloe simplonia Mountain dappled white
Butterflies Iphicles (Papilio) podalirius Scarce swallowtail c1850
Butterflies Lycaena dispar Large copper 1864
Butterflies Lycaena tityrus Sooty copper c1890
Butterflies Lycaena virgaureae Scarce copper 1860
Butterflies Nymphalis polychloros Large tortoiseshell c1953
Butterflies Parnassius apollo Apollo c1850
Butterflies Pontia daplidice Bath white 1900
Butterflies Pyrgus armoricanus Oberthur’s grizzled skipper c1860
Regards Gruditch
Hmm, are some of the butterflies listed fact, or fiction
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/ ... years.html
Butterflies Butterflies Aporia crataegi Black-veined white 1890s/1920s
Butterflies Boloria dia Weaver’s fritillary c1890
Butterflies Carcharodus alceae Mallow skipper c1925
Butterflies Carterocephalus palaemon Chequered skipper 1976
Butterflies Euchloe simplonia Mountain dappled white
Butterflies Iphicles (Papilio) podalirius Scarce swallowtail c1850
Butterflies Lycaena dispar Large copper 1864
Butterflies Lycaena tityrus Sooty copper c1890
Butterflies Lycaena virgaureae Scarce copper 1860
Butterflies Nymphalis polychloros Large tortoiseshell c1953
Butterflies Parnassius apollo Apollo c1850
Butterflies Pontia daplidice Bath white 1900
Butterflies Pyrgus armoricanus Oberthur’s grizzled skipper c1860
Regards Gruditch
- Padfield
- Administrator
- Posts: 8182
- Joined: Sun Nov 05, 2006 10:19 pm
- Location: Leysin, Switzerland
- Contact:
Re: Extinct butterflies in the last 200 years
Amazing.
You'll remember this thread, Gary, from 2010:
viewtopic.php?f=2&t=3993
It's very depressing. Conservation has to be predicated on facts, not lies, when so much hangs in the fragile balance.
Guy
You'll remember this thread, Gary, from 2010:
viewtopic.php?f=2&t=3993
It's very depressing. Conservation has to be predicated on facts, not lies, when so much hangs in the fragile balance.
Guy
Guy's Butterflies: https://www.guypadfield.com
The Butterflies of Villars-Gryon : https://www.guypadfield.com/villarsgryonbook.html
The Butterflies of Villars-Gryon : https://www.guypadfield.com/villarsgryonbook.html
- Padfield
- Administrator
- Posts: 8182
- Joined: Sun Nov 05, 2006 10:19 pm
- Location: Leysin, Switzerland
- Contact:
Re: Extinct butterflies in the last 200 years
The Natural England report from 2010 is still available, even though the link in the above thread no longer works. It can be accessed here: http://publications.naturalengland.org. ... gory=10002
Section 2 claims 18 butterfly species have been lost in the last 200 years and at the foot of the first page 7 of these are listed - including turquoise blue, allegedly lost in 1915, and Oberthür's grizzled skipper, allegedly lost in 1860 (the only year this species has ever been recorded in the UK!).
The Species Recovery Trust lists the lost butterfly species here:
http://www.speciesrecoverytrust.org.uk/ ... utterflies
I find it quite profoundly upsetting to feel the need to lie about what is, in truth, a tragedy.
Guy
Section 2 claims 18 butterfly species have been lost in the last 200 years and at the foot of the first page 7 of these are listed - including turquoise blue, allegedly lost in 1915, and Oberthür's grizzled skipper, allegedly lost in 1860 (the only year this species has ever been recorded in the UK!).
The Species Recovery Trust lists the lost butterfly species here:
http://www.speciesrecoverytrust.org.uk/ ... utterflies
I find it quite profoundly upsetting to feel the need to lie about what is, in truth, a tragedy.
Guy
Guy's Butterflies: https://www.guypadfield.com
The Butterflies of Villars-Gryon : https://www.guypadfield.com/villarsgryonbook.html
The Butterflies of Villars-Gryon : https://www.guypadfield.com/villarsgryonbook.html
- dilettante
- Posts: 564
- Joined: Sun May 01, 2011 11:03 am
- Location: Cambridge area
Re: Extinct butterflies in the last 200 years
I think this will help: http://www.shouldireadthedailymail.com/Gruditch wrote:Saw this article in the Daily Mail, England's lost world: 421 species - including mammals, birds and plants - have become extinct over the past 200 years
Hmm, are some of the butterflies listed fact, or fiction
--
dilettante's butterfly photos at pbase.com
dilettante's butterfly photos at pbase.com
- Lee Hurrell
- Stock Contributor
- Posts: 2423
- Joined: Mon May 25, 2009 7:33 pm
- Location: Hampshire
Re: Extinct butterflies in the last 200 years
dilettante wrote:I think this will help: http://www.shouldireadthedailymail.com/
To butterfly meadows, chalk downlands and leafy glades; to summers eternal.
- Gruditch
- Moderator & Stock Contributor
- Posts: 1689
- Joined: Mon Apr 09, 2007 3:30 pm
- Location: Hampshire
- Contact:
Re: Extinct butterflies in the last 200 years
Nope, I must be getting old.Padfield wrote:You'll remember this thread, Gary, from 2010:
Regards Gruditch
Re: Extinct butterflies in the last 200 years
I didn't remember the thread but found it made fascinating reading. It looks as though the Daily Mail were quoting from a discredited Government report.Padfield wrote:Amazing. You'll remember this thread, Gary, from 2010:viewtopic.php?f=2&t=3993
I particularly enjoyed Piers comment :
"Recent job vacancies for the organisation [Natural England] have specified that knowledge of the subject matter is not required. It would appear that this recruitment policy is bearing fruit..!!"
This seems to apply to a lot of Government departments nowadays.
Mike
Re: Extinct butterflies in the last 200 years
Shaking my head at this. Just where do they get this information from?
- Roger Gibbons
- Posts: 1106
- Joined: Wed Nov 29, 2006 5:29 pm
- Location: Hatfield, Herts
- Contact:
Re: Extinct butterflies in the last 200 years
Quite a few of these are distinctly dubious. Here are a couple of pages from British Butterflies by W S Coleman 1893. He seems to be content to accept almost anyone’s word that they have seen a particular species. Getting included in a book is the first stage of the creation of the myth.
From the Daily Mail list, I would also have huge doubts about Mountain Dappled White (female Orange Tip and a fevered imagination?), Mallow Skipper (Dingy?), Sooty Copper (Small?), and Oberthur’s Grizzled Skipper (Grizzled?). Is there any evidence for any of these?
Apollo, Purple-edged Copper, both extremely unlikely in my opinion. The latter may well have a been a misidentification of a Large Copper. Scarce Swallowtail almost certainly did occur here. Weaver’s (Violet) Fritillary is so like Pearl-bordered that mistaken identity is highly likely without a specimen to examine. I have commented on Arran Brown before and even Coleman thinks it dubious; he refers to blandina which was then the name for Scotch Argus, and the females certainly could be confused from an upperside view alone, although I doubt the males could be confused.
From the Daily Mail list, I would also have huge doubts about Mountain Dappled White (female Orange Tip and a fevered imagination?), Mallow Skipper (Dingy?), Sooty Copper (Small?), and Oberthur’s Grizzled Skipper (Grizzled?). Is there any evidence for any of these?
- Padfield
- Administrator
- Posts: 8182
- Joined: Sun Nov 05, 2006 10:19 pm
- Location: Leysin, Switzerland
- Contact:
Re: Extinct butterflies in the last 200 years
Many of the records are real, Roger - but mostly of accidental introductions or adventives. In some cases, like armoricanus, the date given for the 'extinction' is the only year the species has ever been recorded in the country! It's a little like saying wallabies went extinct in the wild the day they recaught that one that escaped ...
'Mountain dappled white' has never been recorded in the UK, but dappled white has. There is ongoing confusion about the taxonomic status of ausonia, crameri and simplonia, and the four specimens of dappled white were recorded probably correctly, by the then current literature, as simplonia. Curiously, the latest UK butterfly list lumps simplonia and crameri, so this might still be the correct name. But 'mountain' dappled white is certainly incorrect!
Guy
'Mountain dappled white' has never been recorded in the UK, but dappled white has. There is ongoing confusion about the taxonomic status of ausonia, crameri and simplonia, and the four specimens of dappled white were recorded probably correctly, by the then current literature, as simplonia. Curiously, the latest UK butterfly list lumps simplonia and crameri, so this might still be the correct name. But 'mountain' dappled white is certainly incorrect!
Guy
Guy's Butterflies: https://www.guypadfield.com
The Butterflies of Villars-Gryon : https://www.guypadfield.com/villarsgryonbook.html
The Butterflies of Villars-Gryon : https://www.guypadfield.com/villarsgryonbook.html
- Roger Gibbons
- Posts: 1106
- Joined: Wed Nov 29, 2006 5:29 pm
- Location: Hatfield, Herts
- Contact:
Re: Extinct butterflies in the last 200 years
My principal gripe was that some of the species recorded would be prone to misidentification, having common(er) species that appear at least superficially similar, but I'm sure it's true that some species - such as Apollo - may be correctly identified but could only be unnatural introductions. On that basis, Map should also be included.
No mention of Short-tailed (Bloxworth) Blue (as a youngster, I spent quite a few hours meandering around Bloxworth), or Mazarine Blue.
If there is to be a list of extinctions, it should, in my opinion, be restricted to those that can be shown to have occurred naturally in these isles.
No mention of Short-tailed (Bloxworth) Blue (as a youngster, I spent quite a few hours meandering around Bloxworth), or Mazarine Blue.
If there is to be a list of extinctions, it should, in my opinion, be restricted to those that can be shown to have occurred naturally in these isles.
Re: Extinct butterflies in the last 200 years
Hi all. I am afraid that many of those species that were allegedly lost in the last two hundred years that are listed, were never British residents in the first place. The true extinct butterflies in my opinion are
Lycaena dispar.
Aporia crataegi
Maculinea arion. The British subspecies with many interesting geographical races, including the very dark form from some of the Cotswold localities.
Cyaniris semiargus.
In England. Carterocephalus palaemon.
What is much more serious is the massive decline in our British butterflies through habitat change and loss, which continues today.
Regards Peter.
Lycaena dispar.
Aporia crataegi
Maculinea arion. The British subspecies with many interesting geographical races, including the very dark form from some of the Cotswold localities.
Cyaniris semiargus.
In England. Carterocephalus palaemon.
What is much more serious is the massive decline in our British butterflies through habitat change and loss, which continues today.
Regards Peter.
Re: Extinct butterflies in the last 200 years
Oops missed out Nymphalis polychloros from my list.
Re: Extinct butterflies in the last 200 years
Any chance of Natural England becoming extinct? I once ask them for the reason that there is an SSSI a mile from here and was told that I wouldn't understand because it was a geological outcrop