Males rarely stray from the master tree, but when their main food-source of aphid honeydew is scarce, they will sometimes feed lower down on plants such as Hemp Agrimony, Common Fleabane and Ragwort.
Females, with their bright burst of orange on the forewings, are seen more frequently when they leave the master tree to lay their eggs – which look like tiny sea urchins.
Adult butterflies congregate on ‘master’ or ‘assembly’ trees – where they can find food, shelter, and a mate.
The loss of hedgerows and woodland from our landscape is the biggest threat to the brown hairstreak and the reason for its severe decline.
Blackthorn hedges are essential – eggs are laid in the young shoots and the leaves are the sole food source for caterpillars; patches of broadleaved woods are important too. As hedgerows disappear, so does crucial habitat.
Where hedges remain, annual flailing – the mechanical cutting back of hedges – can cause just as much harm and can destroy populations altogether.
We will organise training opportunities and work with volunteers to conduct egg surveys that will help us to identify where existing brown hairstreak colonies exist – and concentrate our conservation work in the right places.
We will then aim to make the populations we know about more robust by: