Southern European butterfly spotted in UK for first time
Experts have tracked the Southern Small White butterfly's rapid expansion northwards through Europe over recent decades. The first UK sighting was confirmed at Landguard Bird Observatory in Suffolk, after a volunteer managed to snap a photo.
The first UK visitor was a female butterfly and was spotted at Landguard Nature Reserve on 2 August by volunteer Will Brame, according to BirdGuides. Will Brame Will Brame told the BBC he had "nabbed a couple of photos" of the butterfly before it had flown off Its identification as a Southern Small White was confirmed by butterfly expert Chris van Swaay of Dutch Butterfly Conservation. James Corton, a County Recorder for Butterflies in Suffolk, contacted us about the story through Your Voice, Your BBC News. Whilst it is thought a warming climate has played a role in its spread, modelling from a 2008 Climatic Risk Atlas of European Butterflies showed that even under the most extreme warming scenarios the species was not expected in the Low Countries until after 2050. Chris van Swaay/Butterfly Conservation How to spot the Southern Small White vs the native Small White: The Southern Small White has a large spot at the edge of its wing that extends further down, in line with the circular spot, compared to the Small White Dr Dan Hoare, Director of Nature Recovery at Butterfly Conservation, said the species had made an "ecological leap". "There are species that are rare in the UK and periodically over the years they have turned up in ones and twos. but it's not really indicating any significant shift in our fauna," he said.
"Southern Small White is very different.
It's basically colonised northern Europe from the Swiss Alps to the North Sea in the last decade, moving north at a rate of about 100 kilometres [62 miles] a year. "
Logic Quality Breakdown:
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Factual Score: 35.0
Analysis: Partially supported claims
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Reasoning Score: 42.5
Analysis: Strong reasoning