Not sure what you're getting at.HarassedDad wrote:Oh dear. the divide between entomologists who are into butterflies and birdwatchers who are into butterflies rears it's head again.

If it's a scientific study into, for instance, Real's/Cryptic Wood White then I don't object. I'm struggling to comprehend how any other activity requiring the killing of butterflies in the UK could be justifiable.Sometimes it even requires killing the insect, even in some cases lepidoptera.
Well, I personally wish the law were different.Butterfly collecting is actually not illegal in this country - although it is illegal to collect certain species without a licence, and illegal to collect any species at certain locations without a licence. But at the the moment, as the law stands, it would be perfectly legal for me to lean over your hedge and catch a Peacock off the buddliea in your garden (as long as I didn't damage the buddleia), and kill it and pin it, and even then sell it on ebay, and you would have no recourse legally except to take out an injunction to stop me doing it again. We might wish the law was different, but that's the law as it stands.
"Confiscating" a net would be a criminal act of theft leading anyone who did it to certainly face charges, irrespective of whether the net belonged to someone who was illegally collecting. The police would certainly see the loss of property as more significant than an offence against the wildlife and countryside act.
I'm quite happy to take that risk. On the 'Richter Scale' of crimes this one resonates at at the lowest level. I'm quite happy to be fined for damaging a net if need be in order to safeguard butterfly welfare.
There's no paranoia. Just genuine concern.This paranoia about insect nets is near universal - which makes it amusing when I lead walks for the local branch of Butterfly Conservation, net in hand
If individuals were carrying nets on PBF/SPBF or Essex/Small Skipper sites then I'd be perfectly relaxed. However, if net wielding individuals suddenly appear at a site that has just seen an influx of rare migrants such as Long Tailed Blues (as happened last year), then in the absence of proper legislation to dissuade people from capturing these butterflies I exercise the right to invoke protective measures of my own if need be.