Last month I wrote about how similar the Australian painted
lady butterfly is to the UK painted lady, and how puzzled I was about how there
came to be two very similar but distinct species.
It turns out that the painted lady butterflies that we get in the UK (Vanessa cardui) is not confined to
Europe and North Africa, but can be found on every continent except Antarctica
and South America. This is probably due
to their exceptional migration capabilities – they migrate from North Africa,
through Europe and the UK and end up near the Arctic Circle, from where in
autumn, they migrate back to N. Africa, a distance of about 9,000 miles.
This degree of mobility means that Australia
has had painted lady butterflies probably about as long as painted lady
butterflies have existed. Opinions on when butterflies evolved vary from 40
million years ago, to 140 million years ago, but their evolution probably
coincided with the spread of flowering plants during the Cretaceous period (79
– 145 million years ago). There is still
a population of ‘UK’ painted lady butterflies (V. cardui) in Western Australia around Perth, whereas the
Australian version (V. kershawi) can
be found over most of the Eastern half of the continent and must have evolved
from an original population of V. cardui. The genitalia of the Australian adult male
butterflies are significantly different to that of the European males so that
it is now considered a different species.
It is unclear what caused the change, but evolution of nectar feeding
insects can be affected by the availability of suitable forage plants.
UK Painted Lady - Vanessa cardui |
Australian Painted Lady - Vanessa kershawi |
As a footnote to this
tale, I was intrigued by the reference to Kershaw in the scientific name. It turns out that William Kershaw was a 19th
century naturalist and gold prospector who had a passion for collecting moths,
butterflies and beetles. His meticulous collection came to the attention of
Frederick McCoy at Melbourne Museum, who purchased the collection and employed
Kershaw at the museum. They became great
friends and when McCoy described the painted lady in 1868, he dedicated the
species to his friend William Kershaw.
It was good to get back home after our Australian trip, even
though the weather was cold, dull and wet for a few days. But we’ve had a week
of mostly sunshine since then so that we can get out and see some of the early
signs of nature coming back to life as winter loses its bite. It was nice to see the familiar birds at the
bird feeders – not as brash and colourful or noisy as the Australian birds but
just as beautiful in their own right. I
thought that I caught a glimpse of a brambling but it may well have been a
slightly scruffy chaffinch. Brambling
are one of a number of species that migrate to the UK when their food sources
run out in Scandinavia. This year there
has been a shortage of beech mast which is normally reliable and long-lasting
forage for the bramblings. They normally
feed in small flocks, which makes the solitary bird that I saw even less likely
to have been a brambling. Other
Scandinavian species that we may see trying their luck over here are redwings,
fieldfares and waxwings. We had waxwings
at Pett Level a few years ago, though I didn’t get to see them.
It was good to see snowdrops in the garden when we got
back.
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