fbpx
Wikipedia

High brown fritillary

Fabriciana adippe, the high brown fritillary, is a large and brightly colored butterfly of the family Nymphalidae, native to Europe and across the Palearctic to Japan. It is known for being Great Britain's most threatened butterfly and is listed as a vulnerable species under the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981.[2] Like other fritillaries it is dependent on warm climates with violet rich flora.

High brown fritillary
Dorsal side, Germany
Ventral side, Austria
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Family: Nymphalidae
Genus: Fabriciana
Species:
F. adippe
Binomial name
Fabriciana adippe
Synonyms[1]
  • Papilio adippe Denis & Schiffermüller, 1775
  • Argynnis adippe

Description Edit

 
dorsal (L) and ventral (R) views

The high brown fritillary's wingspan is on average around 65 mm. Its upper wings are orange with black markings and the undersides are colored a duller orange with white and brown markings. While flying, it is very hard to distinguish from the dark green fritillary which has many of the same markings.[3] The male and female fritillary share many of the same physical features.

Larvae are brown with a single longitudinal white stripe down the length of their body. Their bodies are covered in brown spikes which aid in camouflaging them from predators as they move among dead fern fronds.[4]

Description from Seitz Edit

A. adippe L. (= berecynthia Poda, cydippe L.) (69d). Usually larger than the previous species [ Argynnis alexandra Ménetries, 1832], the wings more obtuse, the outer margin of the forewing quite straight and that of the hindwing feebly undulate in the female. Easily recognized by the thickened hairy streaks placed in the male on the branches of the median vein on the forewing. Beneath the silver-spots are much larger than in niobe, particularly the marginal spots are much longer and broader.[5]

Geographic range Edit

This butterfly has many subspecies that span across Europe and throughout Asia and Africa, given that there are temperate temperatures in those regions. Northern Europe has seen a severe decline in fritillary population but it is still relatively abundant in other parts of Europe.

As of 2015, the high brown fritillary was the most threatened British butterfly species.[4] Populations remain in four areas in Great Britain. The Morecambe Bay Limestone hills, the Glamorgan Brackenlands, Dartmoor and Exmoor all support a fritillary population, while it has declined in most other Northern European regions.[6][4]

Habitat Edit

There are two main habitats that support high brown fritillary populations: bracken and limestone outcrops.[2] Bracken habitats are found across its geographic range but limestone outcrops are specific to Great Britain.

Bracken habitats Edit

These habitats are usually at lower altitudes in open fields and are found across the fritillarys complete range, usually facing in a southern direction. Their flora is not very diverse, and is limited to common ivies, tormentil, wood anemone and violets. Breeding areas are bracken dominated, with dead bracken leaves littering the ground. Grassy areas often intersperse these habitats.

In spring, habitat covered in dead bracken typically also has less dense grass cover, allowing the temperature in these areas to be significantly higher than surrounding areas. Increased temperature allows larvae to mature more quickly here, making bracken-rich habitats favorable breeding sites.[4]

Limestone outcropping habitats Edit

These habitats are specific to Great Britain, especially to the limestone soils of the Morecambe Bay. These outcrops are usually created by human intervention and land management. Breeding persists on limestone soil or near bracken. Throughout the rest of Great Britain, populations are restricted to thick Bracken clumps.

Food resources Edit

Larvae Edit

Unlike other species, fritillary larvae ignore their egg shells as a food source and instead primarily feed on violet seedlings. They focus on younger growth and remain among food plants, eating heavily before metamorphosis.

Adult Edit

Adult fritillaries do not have a very diverse set of plants from which they feed. Both the female and male feed primary on bramble blossom and common knapweed. Fritillaries have also been observed feeding on different thistle species, betony, and ragwort. Local gardens are also commonly frequented as Buddleja is a popular choice among fritillaries as well.

 
2,2a,2b, 2c, 2d, 2e larva after last moult 2f pupa

Life cycle Edit

Egg Edit

Eggs are laid singly[4] in mid-July up till winter's start, overwinter, and hatch in mid-March. Observation of fritillary egg laying is difficult as the eggs are very similar in color to the female's ovipositor. It has been seen that eggs may not even be laid after extensive enquiry by the female of potential egg sites. Females also prefer to lay eggs that are on firm ground rather than ground with loose plant matter. In outcrops eggs are laid in short vegetation next to limestone that offers good moss cover. In Bracken eggs are laid in groups in the midst of thick Bracken clumps. Dead Bracken litter is a popular site for egg laying, as well as moss and other decaying vegetation.[2]

Larvae Edit

Once the larvae of the high brown fritillary emerge from the shell in mid-March, they begin to feed, usually on violets, almost immediately. When not feeding, which it spends the majority of its time doing, the larvae hide themselves among vegetation.[2] They are diurnal and very temperature dependent. They frequently bask in sunlight to raise their body temperature higher than the surrounding vegetation allowing for faster growth. Eggs are laid in spots conducive to sun bathing, and the larvae gravitate towards spots warmed by sun and vegetation. During abnormally high temperatures the larvae hide under plant matter in-between feeding.

Pupa Edit

Before pupation, the larvae form a shroud like structure from leaves and spin a section of silk from the top. This occurs usually around June. The larvae then suspend themselves and enter their pupal stage, which lasts for approximately a month, although this estimate is very temperature dependent. There is not extensive research on the subject.[2]

Adult Edit

The adult fritillary only has one brood a year, as they are a univoltine species. They can be seen flying from late June to late August, or even in certain Limestone areas, till September.[2] Elsewhere they have a shorter flying season, from only mid-June to early August.[6] In warm weather the fritillary is most active, and spends most of its time flying low to the ground above and around Bracken and other flora.

Parental care Edit

Oviposition Edit

The egg laying process begins when a female does low passes above bracken fronds and drop down when they find a suitable spot. Females will then crawl on the bracken littered ground and use their abdomens to probe for likely egg laying spots. Eggs are normally laid once a female crawls over a plant that can serve as a food resource. Eggs may also be laid without any area observation, and without any food plants nearby, as females have been observed to lay eggs within seconds of landing. False egg laying is also common.[2]

Conservation Edit

Current status Edit

The high brown fritillary population, especially in Great Britain, is extremely threatened.[6] It is extinct in over 90% of its former geographic range, making it a high priority for conservation efforts.[2] The species was once widespread in the United Kingdom but has now greatly declined.[7] It has legal protection in the UK under the 1981 Wildlife and Countryside Act.[8] The British decline of the fritillary can be attributed to novel changes in land management, increasing during the 20th century.

Habitat loss Edit

Fritillaries in woodland habitats have been most severally affected by habitat loss. These butterflies relied heavily on coppicing, a land managing technique that has all but disappeared from Great Britain's countryside. The reduction of coppicing combined with replanting and new forest growth has several limited the places the fritillary can thrive, as bracken habitats are becoming rarer. Within bracken habitats, population loss is driven when bracken growth is too extreme or grazing animals trample the flora associated with the butterfly.[2]

Projects Edit

In order to reverse the decline of the high brown fritillary, conservation plans focusing on bracken habitat management are the primary course of action. Bracken sites are in the process of being assessed to see which steps could be taken next. There are tentative plans to implement winter bracken litter clearance and summer path cutting between patches.[citation needed] The high brown fritillary remains one of the Butterfly Conservation's highest priority 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 which the fritillary depends upon.[9] 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.[10][11]

Gallery Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Savela, Markku. "Fabriciana Reuss, 1920". Lepidoptera and Some Other Life Forms. Retrieved 1 October 2019.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Barnett, L. K., & Warren, M. S. (1995). High Brown Fritillary . Wareham, Dorset: Butterfly Conservation
  3. ^ Mulberry, S. (1995). High brown fritillary management in the Heddon Valley and at Watersmeet, Exmoor, Devon. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 56, 95-96. doi:10.1111/j.1095-8312.1995.tb01122.x
  4. ^ a b c d e Ellis, Sam; Bourn, Nigel; Bulman, Caroline; Hobson, Russel; Jones, Rachel; Plackett, Jenny; Middlebrook, Ian; Smith, Richard; Wain, Martin (December 2015). "Britain's Fastest-Declining Butterfly" (PDF). British Wildlife: 111–122.
  5. ^ Seitz. A. in Seitz, A. ed. Band 1: Abt. 1, Die Großschmetterlinge des palaearktischen Faunengebietes, Die palaearktischen Tagfalter, 1909, 379 Seiten, mit 89 kolorierten Tafeln (3470 Figuren)  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  6. ^ a b c (PDF). Butterfly Conservation. Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 October 2008.
  7. ^ "High Brown Fritillary". Butterfly Conservation. Retrieved 9 April 2015.
  8. ^ Pocket Nature Butterflies and Moths, by Paul Sterry and Andrew Mackay, published by Dorling Kindersley 2010, ISBN 978 1 4053 4995 6
  9. ^ GrrlScientist (20 July 2020). "Bison To Return To British Woodland After Absence of More Than Six Millennia". Forbes. Retrieved 21 July 2020.
  10. ^ "European bison to be introduced into Kent woodland". BBC News. 9 July 2020. Retrieved 10 July 2020.
  11. ^ Chantler-Hicks, Lydia (10 July 2020). "Bison to be introduced to Kent woodland". Kent Online. Retrieved 11 July 2020.

External links Edit

  • "Fabriciana Reuss, 1920" at Markku Savela's Lepidoptera and Some Other Life Forms
  • Barnett, L. K., & Warren, M. S. (1995). High Brown Fritillary . Wareham, Dorset: Butterfly Conservation.
  • Mulberry, S. (1995). High brown fritillary management in the Heddon Valley and at Watersmeet, Exmoor, Devon. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 56, 95–96. doi:10.1111/j.1095-8312.1995.tb01122.x
  • Butterfly Conservation. (n.d.). from http://butterfly-conservation.org/
  • Bonsall, M. B., Dooley, C. A., Kasparson, A., Brereton, T., Roy, D. B., & Thomas, J. A. (2014). Allee effects and the spatial dynamics of a locally endangered butterfly, the high brown fritillary (Argynnis adippe). Ecological Applications, 24(1), 108–120. doi:10.1890/13-0155.1
  • Thomas, J. A. (1995). The conservation of declining butterfly populations in Britain and Europe: priorities, problems and successes. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 56, 55–72. doi:10.1111/j.1095-8312.1995.tb01120.x
  • Tudor, O., Dennis, R., Greatorex-Davies, J., & Sparks, T. (2004). Flower preferences of woodland butterflies in the UK: nectaring specialists are species of conservation concern. Biological Conservation, 119(3), 397–403. doi:10.1016/j.biocon.2004.01.002
  • High brown fritillary videos, photos and facts. (n.d.). from [https://web.archive.org/web/20090417063612/http://www.arkive.org/high-brown-fritillary/argynnis-adippe/ ARKive]
  • High Brown Fritillary. (n.d.). from http://www.ukbutterflies.co.uk/species.php?species=adippe

high, brown, fritillary, fabriciana, adippe, high, brown, fritillary, large, brightly, colored, butterfly, family, nymphalidae, native, europe, across, palearctic, japan, known, being, great, britain, most, threatened, butterfly, listed, vulnerable, species, u. Fabriciana adippe the high brown fritillary is a large and brightly colored butterfly of the family Nymphalidae native to Europe and across the Palearctic to Japan It is known for being Great Britain s most threatened butterfly and is listed as a vulnerable species under the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981 2 Like other fritillaries it is dependent on warm climates with violet rich flora High brown fritillaryDorsal side GermanyVentral side AustriaScientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ArthropodaClass InsectaOrder LepidopteraFamily NymphalidaeGenus FabricianaSpecies F adippeBinomial nameFabriciana adippe Denis amp Schiffermuller 1775 Synonyms 1 Papilio adippe Denis amp Schiffermuller 1775 Argynnis adippe Contents 1 Description 2 Description from Seitz 3 Geographic range 4 Habitat 4 1 Bracken habitats 4 2 Limestone outcropping habitats 5 Food resources 5 1 Larvae 5 2 Adult 6 Life cycle 6 1 Egg 6 2 Larvae 6 3 Pupa 6 4 Adult 7 Parental care 7 1 Oviposition 8 Conservation 8 1 Current status 8 2 Habitat loss 8 3 Projects 9 Gallery 10 References 11 External linksDescription Edit nbsp dorsal L and ventral R viewsThe high brown fritillary s wingspan is on average around 65 mm Its upper wings are orange with black markings and the undersides are colored a duller orange with white and brown markings While flying it is very hard to distinguish from the dark green fritillary which has many of the same markings 3 The male and female fritillary share many of the same physical features Larvae are brown with a single longitudinal white stripe down the length of their body Their bodies are covered in brown spikes which aid in camouflaging them from predators as they move among dead fern fronds 4 Description from Seitz EditA adippe L berecynthia Poda cydippe L 69d Usually larger than the previous species Argynnis alexandra Menetries 1832 the wings more obtuse the outer margin of the forewing quite straight and that of the hindwing feebly undulate in the female Easily recognized by the thickened hairy streaks placed in the male on the branches of the median vein on the forewing Beneath the silver spots are much larger than in niobe particularly the marginal spots are much longer and broader 5 Geographic range EditThis butterfly has many subspecies that span across Europe and throughout Asia and Africa given that there are temperate temperatures in those regions Northern Europe has seen a severe decline in fritillary population but it is still relatively abundant in other parts of Europe As of 2015 the high brown fritillary was the most threatened British butterfly species 4 Populations remain in four areas in Great Britain The Morecambe Bay Limestone hills the Glamorgan Brackenlands Dartmoor and Exmoor all support a fritillary population while it has declined in most other Northern European regions 6 4 Habitat EditThere are two main habitats that support high brown fritillary populations bracken and limestone outcrops 2 Bracken habitats are found across its geographic range but limestone outcrops are specific to Great Britain Bracken habitats Edit These habitats are usually at lower altitudes in open fields and are found across the fritillarys complete range usually facing in a southern direction Their flora is not very diverse and is limited to common ivies tormentil wood anemone and violets Breeding areas are bracken dominated with dead bracken leaves littering the ground Grassy areas often intersperse these habitats In spring habitat covered in dead bracken typically also has less dense grass cover allowing the temperature in these areas to be significantly higher than surrounding areas Increased temperature allows larvae to mature more quickly here making bracken rich habitats favorable breeding sites 4 Limestone outcropping habitats Edit These habitats are specific to Great Britain especially to the limestone soils of the Morecambe Bay These outcrops are usually created by human intervention and land management Breeding persists on limestone soil or near bracken Throughout the rest of Great Britain populations are restricted to thick Bracken clumps Food resources EditLarvae Edit Unlike other species fritillary larvae ignore their egg shells as a food source and instead primarily feed on violet seedlings They focus on younger growth and remain among food plants eating heavily before metamorphosis Adult Edit Adult fritillaries do not have a very diverse set of plants from which they feed Both the female and male feed primary on bramble blossom and common knapweed Fritillaries have also been observed feeding on different thistle species betony and ragwort Local gardens are also commonly frequented as Buddleja is a popular choice among fritillaries as well nbsp 2 2a 2b 2c 2d 2e larva after last moult 2f pupaLife cycle EditEgg Edit Eggs are laid singly 4 in mid July up till winter s start overwinter and hatch in mid March Observation of fritillary egg laying is difficult as the eggs are very similar in color to the female s ovipositor It has been seen that eggs may not even be laid after extensive enquiry by the female of potential egg sites Females also prefer to lay eggs that are on firm ground rather than ground with loose plant matter In outcrops eggs are laid in short vegetation next to limestone that offers good moss cover In Bracken eggs are laid in groups in the midst of thick Bracken clumps Dead Bracken litter is a popular site for egg laying as well as moss and other decaying vegetation 2 Larvae Edit Once the larvae of the high brown fritillary emerge from the shell in mid March they begin to feed usually on violets almost immediately When not feeding which it spends the majority of its time doing the larvae hide themselves among vegetation 2 They are diurnal and very temperature dependent They frequently bask in sunlight to raise their body temperature higher than the surrounding vegetation allowing for faster growth Eggs are laid in spots conducive to sun bathing and the larvae gravitate towards spots warmed by sun and vegetation During abnormally high temperatures the larvae hide under plant matter in between feeding Pupa Edit Before pupation the larvae form a shroud like structure from leaves and spin a section of silk from the top This occurs usually around June The larvae then suspend themselves and enter their pupal stage which lasts for approximately a month although this estimate is very temperature dependent There is not extensive research on the subject 2 Adult Edit The adult fritillary only has one brood a year as they are a univoltine species They can be seen flying from late June to late August or even in certain Limestone areas till September 2 Elsewhere they have a shorter flying season from only mid June to early August 6 In warm weather the fritillary is most active and spends most of its time flying low to the ground above and around Bracken and other flora Parental care EditOviposition Edit The egg laying process begins when a female does low passes above bracken fronds and drop down when they find a suitable spot Females will then crawl on the bracken littered ground and use their abdomens to probe for likely egg laying spots Eggs are normally laid once a female crawls over a plant that can serve as a food resource Eggs may also be laid without any area observation and without any food plants nearby as females have been observed to lay eggs within seconds of landing False egg laying is also common 2 Conservation EditCurrent status Edit The high brown fritillary population especially in Great Britain is extremely threatened 6 It is extinct in over 90 of its former geographic range making it a high priority for conservation efforts 2 The species was once widespread in the United Kingdom but has now greatly declined 7 It has legal protection in the UK under the 1981 Wildlife and Countryside Act 8 The British decline of the fritillary can be attributed to novel changes in land management increasing during the 20th century Habitat loss Edit Fritillaries in woodland habitats have been most severally affected by habitat loss These butterflies relied heavily on coppicing a land managing technique that has all but disappeared from Great Britain s countryside The reduction of coppicing combined with replanting and new forest growth has several limited the places the fritillary can thrive as bracken habitats are becoming rarer Within bracken habitats population loss is driven when bracken growth is too extreme or grazing animals trample the flora associated with the butterfly 2 Projects Edit In order to reverse the decline of the high brown fritillary conservation plans focusing on bracken habitat management are the primary course of action Bracken sites are in the process of being assessed to see which steps could be taken next There are tentative plans to implement winter bracken litter clearance and summer path cutting between patches citation needed The high brown fritillary remains one of the Butterfly Conservation s highest priority 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 which the fritillary depends upon 9 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 10 11 Gallery Edit nbsp Dorsal side nbsp Ventral side nbsp female form cleodoxa nbsp on Centaurea sadleriana nbsp on Centaurea nigraReferences Edit Savela Markku Fabriciana Reuss 1920 Lepidoptera and Some Other Life Forms Retrieved 1 October 2019 a b c d e f g h i Barnett L K amp Warren M S 1995 High Brown Fritillary Wareham Dorset Butterfly Conservation Mulberry S 1995 High brown fritillary management in the Heddon Valley and at Watersmeet Exmoor Devon Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 56 95 96 doi 10 1111 j 1095 8312 1995 tb01122 x a b c d e Ellis Sam Bourn Nigel Bulman Caroline Hobson Russel Jones Rachel Plackett Jenny Middlebrook Ian Smith Richard Wain Martin December 2015 Britain s Fastest Declining Butterfly PDF British Wildlife 111 122 Seitz A in Seitz A ed Band 1 Abt 1 Die Grossschmetterlinge des palaearktischen Faunengebietes Die palaearktischen Tagfalter 1909 379 Seiten mit 89 kolorierten Tafeln 3470 Figuren nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain a b c Bracken For Butterflies PDF Butterfly Conservation Archived from the original PDF on 3 October 2008 High Brown Fritillary Butterfly Conservation Retrieved 9 April 2015 Pocket Nature Butterflies and Moths by Paul Sterry and Andrew Mackay published by Dorling Kindersley 2010 ISBN 978 1 4053 4995 6 GrrlScientist 20 July 2020 Bison To Return To British Woodland After Absence of More Than Six Millennia Forbes Retrieved 21 July 2020 European bison to be introduced into Kent woodland BBC News 9 July 2020 Retrieved 10 July 2020 Chantler Hicks Lydia 10 July 2020 Bison to be introduced to Kent woodland Kent Online Retrieved 11 July 2020 External links Edit Fabriciana Reuss 1920 at Markku Savela s Lepidoptera and Some Other Life Forms Barnett L K amp Warren M S 1995 High Brown Fritillary Wareham Dorset Butterfly Conservation Mulberry S 1995 High brown fritillary management in the Heddon Valley and at Watersmeet Exmoor Devon Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 56 95 96 doi 10 1111 j 1095 8312 1995 tb01122 x Butterfly Conservation n d from http butterfly conservation org Bonsall M B Dooley C A Kasparson A Brereton T Roy D B amp Thomas J A 2014 Allee effects and the spatial dynamics of a locally endangered butterfly the high brown fritillary Argynnis adippe Ecological Applications 24 1 108 120 doi 10 1890 13 0155 1 Thomas J A 1995 The conservation of declining butterfly populations in Britain and Europe priorities problems and successes Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 56 55 72 doi 10 1111 j 1095 8312 1995 tb01120 x Tudor O Dennis R Greatorex Davies J amp Sparks T 2004 Flower preferences of woodland butterflies in the UK nectaring specialists are species of conservation concern Biological Conservation 119 3 397 403 doi 10 1016 j biocon 2004 01 002 High brown fritillary videos photos and facts n d from https web archive org web 20090417063612 http www arkive org high brown fritillary argynnis adippe ARKive High Brown Fritillary n d from http www ukbutterflies co uk species php species adippe Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title High brown fritillary amp oldid 1170329448, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.