But why?
I see they're all over the place in mainland europe - Belgium France Switzerland..and here? ...Scotland!
Now I always thought Scotland was..well..cold and wet..and a bit butterfly unfriendly. Is the Chequered Skipper just being bloody minded and a tad difficult? Why doesn't it think "Let's go South a bit where it's a bit warmer and sunnier"?
Does it have really specialised conditions, like a rare food plant? The large Blue..I can understand that being rare, with the particular ants..and then there being enough of them..and the South facing slopes and the Wild Thyme blah blah blah..but the CS doesn't require ants does it.
Does it have to have really cold spells in Winter in order for it to do it's thing. Somebody told me the Camberwell Beauty needs this and that our Winters aren't cold enough in the UK. Example go to Poland and you'll see CB all over the place (I went in 1995 and it was). Poland is bloody freezing in Winter (and you have to pay a toilet lady every time you want to go for a wee).
Does it need altitude? Never really understood the altitude thing either...I'm sure Padfield could explain this one.
...whilst were at it (and I know I've asked before - but ages ago now) how come the Heath Fritillary occurs in only two places in the UK? Devon and Kent. I went to East Blean in Kent and when it's out and about there are tons of them around..how come the Heath Fritillary doesn't..well..spread it wings a bit?
With global warming there's all this talk of butterflies heading northward from the South and colonising like billyo. How come the Chequered Skipper doesn't take a taste of the South and fly down to East Sussex

Danny