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Europe's Butterfly Population In Trouble After Habitats, Farms Destroyed

Posted: 03/29/2012 1:16 pm Updated: 03/30/2012 5:13 pm

Europe Butterflies
The threatened dusky blue butterfly, a species that lives part of its life with ants.

By OurAmazingPlanet Staff:

Many of Europe's butterflies are in trouble, according to a new report, but a team of scientists is offering hope for the beleaguered insects. The team has outlined some key strategies -- some of them surprising -- for saving the continent's butterflies.

In the last 15 years alone, the numbers of 17 key European butterfly species have declined by 70 percent, according to a statement from researchers with the group Butterfly Conservation Europe.

Up to 10 percent of the butterfly species are now threatened with extinction.

Across the Atlantic, in North America, monarch butterfly numbers have also suffered.

In Europe, habitat destruction is fueling the steep losses, and the group has outlined some key "do's and don'ts" for preserving the grasslands that butterflies require to breed and feed. Their paper is published in the journal Nature Conservation.

Oddly, it appears that the decline of agriculture in Europe is bad for the butterflies.

The authors of the report say that maintaining working farms is an important activity that keeps woody shrubs from taking over the grassy meadows where butterflies typically live.

In addition, the authors say that grazing animals also help preserve key butterfly habitat.

However, they say that too much agriculture -- cutting too much grass for hay, letting animals overgraze a pasture -- can kill off the insects.

The group also recommends keeping a diverse mosaic of plants alive in key grassland areas, since different species rely on different plants, and employ a wide variety of strategies to survive.

In fact, one threatened butterfly relies on ants to stay alive, and as the ants are disappearing, so are their larger insect dependants.

Phengaris nausithous, the dusky large blue butterfly, spends the majority of its caterpillar stage holed up underground in the nests of red ants.

For this odd species, "meadows need to be cut every one to three years, or lightly grazed, leaving some patches of taller vegetation which supports the ants' nests. Intensive cutting or heavy grazing can eliminate populations," the authors wrote.

"Managing habitats in the correct way is the single most important issue affecting the survival of European butterflies," lead author Chris van Swaay, of Dutch Butterfly Conservation, said in a statement.

"We hope the advice will be taken up urgently across Europe to help save these beautiful species from extinction."

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By OurAmazingPlanet Staff: Many of Europe's butterflies are in trouble, according to a new report, but a team of scientists is offering hope for the beleaguered insects. The team has outlined some ...
By OurAmazingPlanet Staff: Many of Europe's butterflies are in trouble, according to a new report, but a team of scientists is offering hope for the beleaguered insects. The team has outlined some ...
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Artemesian
Spiritual Messenger of the Earth
12:10 PM on 03/30/2012
Protect your fields and native wildflowers - some species of butterfly are totally dependent on certain plants and other insects for life, and some butterfly habitat is extremely localized. An open field isn't usess because it is sitting there not being developed for economic gain, it has value for the environment, as do wetlands and deserts. They are also pollinators; there's an interdependence with all life in the environment. Some endangered butterflies are recolonizing in the open fields around airports! :)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
karen lyons kalmenson
i poem/paint, sometimes, i ain't
04:27 AM on 03/30/2012
our lives are all so intertwined,
our world would slowly die
without magical butterflies,
fine
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Siren Song
Extinction is forever
02:40 AM on 03/30/2012
I hope it is not too late for these beautiful butterflies.

If overgrazing is a problem, I strongly suggest people consider giving up meat. Animal people push this, but environments don't seem see a connection with the demise of the planet and this practice.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Linus521
In wildness is the salvation of mankind
02:49 PM on 03/29/2012
Science uses butterfly populations to gauge the viability of Earth's ecosystems. Habitat loss equates to ecosystem death and destruction or the eco-nomy of life itself.

Mankind is as dependent on ecosystems for life as are butterflies and all the strands in the great web.