Abstract

The Large Copper butterfly, Lycaena dispar, is extinct in Britain and rapidly declining in the rest of Europe, due predomi- nantly to loss of its wetland habitats. In the Netherlands the sub-species L. d. batavus is at the edge of its range in Northern Europe and, as with most marginal butterflies, has more specialised food plant and habitat requirements than the core populations of L. d. rutilus. We investigate reasons for the relative specialisation of L. d. batavus on Rumex hydrolapathum in a fenland habitat when compared to the more widespread and common L. d. rutilus. Host-plant choice by ovipositing females and by larvae are measured as well as larval performance on alternative hosts. Laboratory experiments reveal that larvae are able to feed on other Rumex species without detriment to their overall survival and can utilise these alternative host plants at least as efficiently as their natural host plant. This suggests that plant chemistry is not responsible for their lack of utilisation in the wild. Under greenhouse conditions, females showed an equal willingness to oviposit on host and alternative Rumex, expressing no significant preference for any particular plant species. However, in field experiments using free-ranging females in a fenland habitat, eggs were laid only on R. hydrolapathum. Our interpretation is that there are no short distance cues discriminating between the three Rumex species but longer distance cues in the field situation may operate to maintain this host-plant specialisation. The selection pressure maintaining L. d. batavus as a spe- cialist on R. hydrolapathum in a wetland may underlie its current rarity.

Highlights

  • The large copper butterfly, Lycaena dispar, is widespread throughout central and eastern Europe (Pullin et al, 1998) but has been declining on the north and western fringes of its range

  • This paper investigates the ecological basis of the food plant and habitat specialisation in L. d. batavus by comparing its preferences and performance on its host plant R. hydrolapathum and two other Rumex species commonly used by L. d. rutilus, R. crispus and R. obtusifolius

  • An alternative explanation is that R. hydrolapathum is used because L. d. batavus is confined to fenland for other reasons and only rarely encounters other Rumex species

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The large copper butterfly, Lycaena dispar, is widespread throughout central and eastern Europe (Pullin et al, 1998) but has been declining on the north and western fringes of its range. This species went extinct in England in the late 19th Century and is currently reduced to a few populations in both the Netherlands and Finland as well as showing substantial declines in Germany and Poland. Papilio machaon britannicus (Swallowtail) is a wetland subspecies, confined to the UK, which utilises only Peucedanum palustre as a larval host plant On the continent this species uses a wider range of umbellifers (Dempster & Hall, 1980). Survival of larvae on the same plant species in the field is reported in another paper (Martin & Pullin, 2004)

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call