A wonderful 15 minute video showing the life cycle of this species. Filmed entirely in the wild in France by VarWild.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ExcXuU3GW4M
Thanks go to Roger Gibbons for drawing it to our attention.
Black-veined White life cycle video
- Vince Massimo
- Administrator & Stock Contributor
- Posts: 1889
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- Location: Crawley, Sussex
- Chris Jackson
- Posts: 1929
- Joined: Mon May 06, 2013 6:35 am
- Location: Marseilles, France
Re: Black-veined White life cycle video
I’ve watched it and thoroughly enjoyed it.
What patience these naturalists have.
Well done.
Chris
What patience these naturalists have.
Well done.
Chris
- PhilBJohnson
- Posts: 728
- Joined: Sun Mar 23, 2014 11:04 pm
- Location: Lincoln, Lincolnshire
- Contact:
Re: Black-veined White life cycle video
A super video. Some of the long zooms, might have had, just a little more image stabilisation.
Q1. If Sir Winston Churchill was left in charge of the Black-veined White's comeback in the UK, was that a political mistake? Not everyone might of had reverence, for bringing back extinct butterflies, rebuilding England after WWII.
Q2. A Black-veined White appeared to have spent most of it's life cycle as a larvaI. In climate changed England, might larvae have not gone into a proper diapause, so being more vulnerable to predatory birds, that might have noticed it, before Hawthorn leafed?
Q.3 If it needed "caterpillar conservation" to help it with it's life cycles in Scotland, might that be a less harsh predatory bird winter in England?
Referenced Reading List:
Sir Winston Churchill, Page 171, A Kaleidoscope of Butterflies, ©2020 Jonathan Bradley
#Chartwell #NationalTrust #ButterflyConservation #Churchill's Butterfly Sanctuary
and
https://www.ukbutterflies.co.uk/species ... s=crataegi
Aporia crataegi
Kind Regards
Q1. If Sir Winston Churchill was left in charge of the Black-veined White's comeback in the UK, was that a political mistake? Not everyone might of had reverence, for bringing back extinct butterflies, rebuilding England after WWII.
Q2. A Black-veined White appeared to have spent most of it's life cycle as a larvaI. In climate changed England, might larvae have not gone into a proper diapause, so being more vulnerable to predatory birds, that might have noticed it, before Hawthorn leafed?
Q.3 If it needed "caterpillar conservation" to help it with it's life cycles in Scotland, might that be a less harsh predatory bird winter in England?
Referenced Reading List:
Sir Winston Churchill, Page 171, A Kaleidoscope of Butterflies, ©2020 Jonathan Bradley
#Chartwell #NationalTrust #ButterflyConservation #Churchill's Butterfly Sanctuary
and
https://www.ukbutterflies.co.uk/species ... s=crataegi
Aporia crataegi
Kind Regards
Kind Regards,
- PhilBJohnson
- Posts: 728
- Joined: Sun Mar 23, 2014 11:04 pm
- Location: Lincoln, Lincolnshire
- Contact:
Re: Black-veined White life cycle video
To better understand how a Black-veined white butterfly might have camouflaged roosting and/or ovipositing, one might have looked further at it's global, native (less controversial) distribution & what other larval food plants, it might have evolved to use.
#LinksWithChina
#LinksWithChina
Kind Regards,