Heath fritillary
The heath fritillary is a butterfly of the family Nymphalidae. It is found throughout the Palaearctic from western Europe to Japan, in heathland, grassland, and in coppiced woodland. Its association with coppiced woodland earned it the name "woodman's follower" in parts of the UK. It is considered a threatened species in the UK and Germany, but not Europe-wide or globally.
Description
Heath fritillaries have a wingspan of 39–47 mm. The upperside is predominantly dark brown and orange brown, with the orange-brown spots delineated by dark brown ; there is a white fringe to the wings through which the dark brown extends. The upperside of the body is a similar dark brown to the colour on the wing, and the base of both wings is dark brown. The underside shows bands of red and white, again with each vein dark brown and each colour delineated by dark brown. The pattern of white spots at the base of the hindwing is diagnostic for identification.These wing patterns are very similar to the appearance of Melitaea cinxia. However, the dark brown bands on underside of the wings are more distinct in the health fritillary than in M. cinxia.
Range
The heath fritillary ranges throughout the Palaearctic region from western Europe to Japan. In Europe, it is absent from Iceland, Ireland, Scotland, Wales, southern Portugal, southern Spain, the Mediterranean islands and southern Greece.In the UK, it is restricted to Cornwall and Devon grasslands ; Exmoor ; and Kent and Essex. The populations in Essex are the result of reintroductions, and further reintroductions are ongoing in various other parts of the UK. In the late 1990s, the species was estimated to occupy just 0.2% within the 10-km grid squares over the whole of its UK range.
Its altitudinal range is from sea level to 2600 m.
Status
Heath fritillary is not listed on the IUCN Red List, suggesting that globally it is not considered threatened. In the UK, however, the species was "considered to be the most endangered British butterfly" after a nationwide survey in 1980 found only 31 surviving colonies. Consequently, it was given protection under the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981. Despite subsequent widespread efforts to conserve and manage the species' habitats, it has continued to decline: distribution has declined 25% since the 1970s, and abundance-wise it declined by 46% in the 10 years 1995–2004. Woodland sites in Kent and Essex are actively managed for the conservation of this species. It has been a "high priority" species in the UK Biodiversity Action Plan since 1995 and has its own Species Action Plan.Heath fritillary is also on the "Red List" in Germany.
However, the species is considered of "least concern" on a European scale.
Habitat
Within Europe, the heath fritillary occupies a diversity of grassy, flowery habitats—dry or damp, upland or lowland, with or without shrubs or trees, including woodland clearings and heathland.More specifically, in England, this species occupies three distinct habitats:
- Unimproved grassland with abundant short or sparse swards of ribwort plantain or germander speedwell on stony soils – sometimes in the form of abandoned hay meadows
- Sheltered heathland with common cow-wheat scattered among bilberry-dominated vegetation – valleys with mineral soils
- Coppiced woodland with common cow-wheat on acid soils.
Conservation projects
The Wilder Blean project, headed up by the Wildwood Trust and Kent Wildlife Trust, is introducing European bison to the UK for the first time in 6000 years. Their actions create open, light-flooded patches that encourage the growth of cow wheat. The herd of 3 females and 1 male will be set free in 2022 within a 2,500-acre conservation area in Blean Woods near Canterbury.Habits
Heath fritillaries typically fly close to the ground, with characteristic "flits" and glides. Colonies tend to be compact, centred on favoured breeding areas. Heath fritillaries are highly sedentary for the most part, adults rarely moving more than 100 m; however, some have been recorded dispersing up to 2 km. For a species of often short-lived habitats, it has remarkably limited colonizing ability; suitable habitats over 600 m from an existing colony are colonized slowly.Life cycle
Egg
The female heath fritillary lays its eggs in batches of 80–150 on the underside of leaf of a larval food plant or on a plant adjacent to the larval food plant.Eggs are oval spheroids with flattened bases, about 0.5 mm high. They are ribbed and striated. Pale cream when laid, eggs darken to pale yellow within two days, and then dark grey a few days before hatching. Eggs mature in two to three weeks.
Caterpillar
Upon emergence, first-instar caterpillars eat their eggshells. The caterpillars from a clutch initially stay together, feeding in a small, unobtrusive web. Second or third instar caterpillars disperse into smaller groups. Then the third instars tend to feed and rest solitarily; they rest beneath dead leaves at night and during bad weather. The caterpillar hibernates for the winter in a hibernaculum, made from a curled dead leaf by spinning its edges together. Hibernacula are usually close to the ground. Although most caterpillars hibernate singly, they sometimes group in twos and threes, although 15 to 20 caterpillars have been found in single hibernaculum.Caterpillars re-emerge in early spring. When it is warm, they feed a little, but most of the time is spent basking in the sun. There are six instars in total. The full-grown sixth instar caterpillar is 22–25 mm long, and predominantly black; it has pale spines and spots.
Pupa
The pupae are 12.4–12.8 cm long and last 15–25 days. They are white with black and orange-brown blotches. Pupae are usually found close to the ground in or beneath dead leaves.A study in Cornwall, England, recorded mortality rates in the region of 50%, mostly from predation by small mammals, but including predation by beetles, and parasitism.
Imago
Imagines probably live for 5–10 days. Males are active on warm sunny days. Females mate once shortly after emerging; they lay their eggs only during warm weather, spending most of the time either basking or hiding in vegetation.Flight period
Across its range, subspecies M. a. athalia shows a protracted flight period from mid-May to mid-August. In favourable localities and/or favourable seasons, a partial second brood has been recorded from mid- or late August to September. In the UK, the flight period is from the end of May to the beginning of July and early June to early August.Fennoscandian subspecies M. a. norvegica flies in June–July, precise timing being affected by the season.
In southern Europe, subspecies M. a. celadussa flies in a single brood at high altitude in June and July. Below the subalpine level, however, it is bivoltine, flying in May–June and late July–August—except for f. nevadensis in the Sierra Nevada, which is univoltine.
Host plants
In the UK, the following species are used:- Common cow-wheat – the only food plant in woodland, and principal food plant on heathland
- Common foxglove – secondary food plant on heathland
- Ribwort plantain – major food plant on grassland
- Germander speedwell – major food plant on grassland
- Greater plantain – secondary food plant
- Ivy-leaved speedwell – secondary food plant
- Thyme-leaved speedwell – secondary food plant
- Yarrow – secondary food plant
- Alpine plantain
- Mountain speedwell
- Heath speedwell
- Spiked speedwell
- Small cow-wheat
- Rusty foxglove
- Yellow foxglove
- Common toadflax
Subspecies and variation
- M. a. athalia – from the Atlantic coast to the Bosphorus , excluding the ranges of the following subspecies
- M. a. norvegica Aurivillius 1888 – Fennoscandia
- M. a. celadussa Frühstorfer 1910 – northern Iberia and the Sierra Nevada, southern France, southern Switzerland, Italy
- M. a. dictynnoides – south-west Europe?
- M. a. lucifuga – south-east Europe
- M. a. reticulata Higgins 1955 – Altai
- M. a. baikalensis – southern Siberia to Amur?
- M. a. hyperborea Dubatolov 1997 – Magadan, Kamchatka
In central Sweden and Finland, M. a. norvegica f. lachares Frühstorfer has finer black markings; transitional forms between f. lachares and typical M. a. norvegica occur in southern Sweden.
In Portugal and north-west Spain, M. a. celadussa f. biedermanni Querci is larger than typical M. a. celadussa, with finer black lines in the outer half of the wing, but a thicker discal line; transitional forms occur in central west Spain. In Sierra Nevada, f. nevadensis Verity is golden yellow with fine black markings. In "southern" Europe, f. tenuicola Verity occurs in late broods—it is small and its black markings reduced.