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- Pete
New Article! Glanville Fritillary at Sand Point
- Pete Eeles
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New Article! Glanville Fritillary at Sand Point
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Re: New Article! Glanville Fritillary at Sand Point
I thoroughly enjoyed reading this and it has answered many of the questions I had regarding this population.
I already knew about the original introduction in 1983, but wasn't aware of the subsequent one. I'd even heard rumours that 'topping up' was being done by official bodies!
I visited the site on 26th May 2012 and saw 30+ Glanvilles, but when I returned in 2013 could not find any. Bill (Willrow) tried a couple of times that year without reward and I think he may have gone there again last year only to draw a blank.
I was particularly interested in the section which dealt with the aberrant markings that some individuals on this site showed, suggesting that they were continental in origin.
Guy Padfield highlighted a couple of the individuals I photographed as being abnormally weakly marked so there is clearly something in this. Here's one of them:

I already knew about the original introduction in 1983, but wasn't aware of the subsequent one. I'd even heard rumours that 'topping up' was being done by official bodies!
I visited the site on 26th May 2012 and saw 30+ Glanvilles, but when I returned in 2013 could not find any. Bill (Willrow) tried a couple of times that year without reward and I think he may have gone there again last year only to draw a blank.
I was particularly interested in the section which dealt with the aberrant markings that some individuals on this site showed, suggesting that they were continental in origin.
Guy Padfield highlighted a couple of the individuals I photographed as being abnormally weakly marked so there is clearly something in this. Here's one of them:

- Jack Harrison
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Re: New Article! Glanville Fritillary at Sand Point
This taken Sand Point May 2011 would seem to have "standard" markings.

Jack

Jack
Re: New Article! Glanville Fritillary at Sand Point
I found this an interesting and useful article, explaining how re-introductions rarely succeed in places that the butterflies haven't found for themselves.
I was fortunate to make my own visit to Sand Point in 2012, when the adult population was at its peak. I took some 'habitat shots' of the South-facing slope, where most of the butterflies were flying, on 28th May 2012 and thought at the time that the grasses were looking rather dense, compared with sites that I have visited on the Isle of Wight.
This is one of the Glanville Fritillaries that I photographed on that day. The markings seemed 'normal' to me, though I have no experience of continental specimens.
Mike
I was fortunate to make my own visit to Sand Point in 2012, when the adult population was at its peak. I took some 'habitat shots' of the South-facing slope, where most of the butterflies were flying, on 28th May 2012 and thought at the time that the grasses were looking rather dense, compared with sites that I have visited on the Isle of Wight.
This is one of the Glanville Fritillaries that I photographed on that day. The markings seemed 'normal' to me, though I have no experience of continental specimens.
Mike