Th. Sparks et al., THE CHOICE OF OVIPOSITION SITES IN WOODLAND BY THE DUKE OF BURGUNDY BUTTERFLY HAMEARIS-LUCINA IN ENGLAND, Biological Conservation, 70(3), 1994, pp. 257-264
The Duke of Burgundy butterfly Hamearis lucina has suffered a rapid de
cline in Britain in recent decades as a result of habitat change. Whil
st the larval food plants, Primula spp., are common in Britain, the ov
ipositing female butterfly requires exacting standards of shade, plant
size and structure of the surrounding vegetation. This paper attempts
to quantify the requirements of the species in woodland and results s
uggest that a major requirement is for an early, but not the earliest,
successional stage of vegetation structure.