Thursday, April 17, 2025
12.4 C
Gedling

Wildlife charity urges people in Gedling borough to let garden grass grow in bid to boost butterfly numbers

Experts say more than half of the UK butterfly species are now in long-term decline as humans destroy habitats

Bookmark

Get breaking news and a daily update sent to your WhatsApp by signing up HERE

A wildlife charity is urging people in Gedling borough to let part of the garden grow wild with long grass until September to help boost the declining UK butterfly population.

The UK Butterfly Monitoring Scheme made the plea after revealing more than half of the UK butterfly species are now in long-term decline, as humans destroy habitats, use pesticides and drive climate change.

The charity has also revealed that 2024 was one of the worst on record for butterflies in the UK with species including the small tortoiseshell, the chalk hill blue and small copper suffering their worst year ever.

The monitoring scheme by charity Butterfly Conservation, the UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology (UKCEH), the British Trust for Ornithology (BTO) and the Joint Nature Conservation Committee (JNCC) has been running since 1976, and now sees volunteers count butterflies across more than 3,000 sites.

- Advertisement -
brown and black butterfly perched on yellow and red petaled flower closeup photography
2024 was one of the worst on record for butterflies in the UK (Photo: Leonardo Jarro)

Monitoring revealed that 2024 was the fifth worst year since records began for butterflies, with 51 of the UK’s 59 butterfly species declining last year compared with 2023, while just six increased.

It was the second worst year on record for common butterflies that live in gardens, parks and the wider countryside such as common blue, gatekeeper and large whites, while nine species had their worst year since counting began.

Experts said that butterfly numbers fluctuate from year to year, and last year’s low numbers are in part due to the wet spring and relatively cool summer which did not provide good conditions for winged insects to feed and breed.

But the monitoring data also shows that for the first time, more than half of the UK’s butterfly species are in long-term decline.

It reveals 31 have declined since monitoring began, with 22 species suffering significant declines including widespread species such as the small tortoiseshell whose numbers have plummeted 86% since 1976, and the green-veined white which has seen a 28% decline.

- Advertisement -

Several species listed on the “red list” amid concerns over their survival, the grizzled skipper, small pearl-bordered fritillary and chalk hill blue, had their worst year on record, the monitoring showed.

Conservationists said those species required specific habitat to survive, which had been destroyed over the past century.

Richard Fox, from Butterfly Conservation, said he was “devastated” by the declines in British butterflies, which he said were driven by human actions.

Dr Fox said: “I am devastated by the decline of our beloved British butterflies, and I’m sorry to say it has been brought about by human actions: we have destroyed wildlife habitats, polluted the environment, used pesticides on an industrial scale and we are changing the climate.

“That means that when we have poor weather, these already-depleted butterfly populations are highly vulnerable and can’t bounce back like they once did – and with climate change, that unusual weather is becoming more and more usual.”

- Advertisement -

The results come after Butterfly Conservation declared a UK-wide “butterfly emergency” following the worst-ever results of its citizen science Big Butterfly Count last year.

Dr Fox said the wildlife charity had been “inundated” with people last summer asking where the butterflies had gone and what they could do to help.

He said: “By far the best thing we can do to help butterflies is to create more habitat,” he said, pointing to research by the charity which showed letting part of the garden grow wild with long grass increases butterflies – particularly in gardens and intensive agriculture.

“That is why we are calling on people and councils across the UK to pledge to not cut their grass this year from April to September: this simple act can make a real, immediate difference to butterflies, moths and other wildlife.”

Spotted something? Got a story? Email our newsdesk news@gedlingeye.co.uk

Read more from Gedling Eye

Get your daily news briefing every evening…

Sign up for our daily news email and receive Gedling borough news direct to your email inbox in the early evening, to read at your leisure on your desktop, tablet or mobile wherever you are.

We don’t spam and you'll only receive one email a day

Join the discussion

1 COMMENT

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

ADVERTISEMENT

Most read