Rugged, hilly landscapes with a variety of habitats are important for butterflies15/02/2010 09:30:09
Fontmell down in Dorset - Morag McCracken /Centre for Ecology & Hydrology February 2010. Rugged, hilly landscapes with a range of different habitat types can help maintain more stable butterfly populations and thus aid their conservation, according to a new study. The research has implications for how we might design landscapes better to help conserve species. Stable butterfly populations For more butterfly news, Click here. Brown Argus & Dingy skipper 35 butterfly species studied
Co-author Dr Jane Hill of the Department of Biology at the University of York said, "Our findings show that more diverse landscapes may provide a greater range of resources and microclimates, which can buffer insect populations from declines in difficult years." A surprising result from the study was that, for some butterfly species, the diversity of habitats up to 5km away from monitored sites affected the butterfly populations. Co-author Dr Tom Brereton, Head of Monitoring at Butterfly Conservation, said, "Our results highlight the importance of taking a landscape perspective for species conservation." The researchers hope that in the future it may be possible to design landscapes that are more effective at conserving species. Co-author Dr David Roy from the Centre for Ecology & Hydrology said, "With a rapidly changing climate we need our landscapes to support biodiversity as well as provide other ecosystem services such as food production and clean water. Using remotely-sensed land cover data from satellites to design landscapes may help us to achieve the right balance." The study was carried out by scientists from the Centre for Ecology & Hydrology, Butterfly Conservation and the University of York, and published in the journal Ecology Letters.
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A comprehensive review of the need for heterogeneity is given in Natural England Research Report NERR024 - Managing for species: Integrating the needs of England’s priority species into habitat management. The UK Biodiversity Action Plan has not been successful at achieving the recovery of threatened habitats and widespread species since its narrow focus is on the rarest species. The report analyses show that the generic management of current orthodoxy is failing to create the component niches and resources required by BAP species. Thus structural variation within and between habitats is often an important factor, both because different species require different structural states and because many species rely on many different states to complete their life cycles. This will of course need a greater creativity and skill than is currently shown by the conservation industry.
Posted by: Mark Fisher | 15 Feb 2010 09:14:23