Nature Notes: 'One of our most attractive Spring butterflies'

One of our most attractive spring butterflies is the orange tip.

Only the male sports the tangerine colour on his wing tips whereas the female's wings show a delicate filigree pattern and can be mistaken for a small white butterfly.

April was sunny, dry, cold windy and frosty, and that weather pattern continued into May, certainly not butterfly weather so most species were very scarce although I did see a few orange tips and brimstones in bluebell woods.

The orange tip lays eggs on garlic mustard and ladies smock.

Females are careful to lay a single egg on one plant because caterpillars are cannibalistic.

If a second female mistakenly lays an egg on the same plant, the first caterpillar to hatch will eat the second one, a cunning ploy of nature to ensure enough food is available and larvae don't starve.

Ladies smock is also known as 'cuckoo flower', a popular folklore plant that blooms in April and May when cuckoos call, or used to!

The flower is often covered in 'cuckoo-spit', a foamy substance which our forefathers believed was deposited by cuckoos spitting!

But of course cuckoos don't spit but the froth is caused by a tiny green insect called a frog hopper that pierces the plant to feed on the juices and covers itself in foam as a protection against predators.

The photo shows an orange tip perched on cuckoo flower in a bluebell wood.

Nature Notes: 'One of our most attractive Spring butterflies' Nature Notes: 'One of our most attractive Spring butterflies' Reviewed by Online Reviews on 6:10 AM Rating: 5

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