On the Teme river meadow. White, seemed to have 3 wings either side. No markings above, black spots under wings, yellow body. Any ideas, or have we found something new to science.
Are you sure it was a butterfly, not a day-flying moth? Most white butterflies seem to have dark dots on the wings or a bit of dark wing edging, and they don't have yellow bodies (that I can see, anyway). They tend to have grey bodies. I wonder if it's a foreign one that's drifted over during the hot dry spell?
------------- Always edited for sloppy typing - when I spot it!
Try www.wildlifetrusts.org yourself. I found the butterfly conservation website a bit tricky but it’s worth trying too. I have a very good book in the MH, but you know size, habitat etc.
And whatever agency that manages the meadow might have a website or respond to a query.
Thanks Fiona, we definitely want to find out, it was very different. Dad was a keen naturalist and I was brought up on identifying species. He was a plant man and I am a geologist.
The annual “Big Butterfly Count” is running until 6 Aug 2023. I have the app from previous years, it includes a handy ID. Not seeing many butterflies this year, but I’ll try to post something over the coming weeks.
Thanks Fiona. We had a peacock earlier, we always say that it is our Charlie dog, as one came into the caravan the day after she was PTS. Also a gatekeeper but nothing unusual about that.
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