Marcus Rhodes

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108 Posts
Ecologist & conservationist • PhD student at the University of Exeter, Cornwall studying butterflies & climate change • He/Him
InstitutionEnvironment & Sustainability Institute, University of Exeter
Websitehttps://www.exeter.ac.uk/research/esi/people/profile/index.php?web_id=marcus_rhodes
When I started butterflying there were still >130 pops of the Alcon Blue (P alcon), now not more than 15, and we're still loosing 1 or 2 each year. It is hard to beat low water levels and Nitrogen deposition. I fear that when I stop butterflying, there will be only 1 or 2 left.
Purple emperor (Apatura iris), Western Switzerland, July 2022
This Red Admiral was out flying in 3°C ambient air temperature and with frost still on the ground this morning. Very much the "Christmas Butterfly" these days!

Back in 2017, on a whim, we attended a conference at #LancasterUniversity on Rare #butterflies of #MorecambeBay.

One of the presentations was on the Duke of Burgundy (Hamearis lucina), and just two days later, having joined @savebutterflies we found ourselves on a work party planting the Duke's larval food plant – primroses – in South Cumbria.

I was hooked. Got involved in surveying habitat, counting adult butterflies and then hunting for eggs and larvae.

The start of my butterfly obsession.

Good morning. Here's a Heath Fritillary (Melitaea athalia) from the Tamar Valley last June. Have a lovely week!

#butterfly #butterflies #HeathFritillary #Lepidoptera #entomology

Small Pearl-bordered Fritillary 🦋😍

🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿 Carrifran, July 2022

👉New paper out 👇
It's on🦋conservation & #agroecology in the European Alps 🇪🇺🏔️

Results from #BiodiversityMonitoringSouthTyrol
Last chapter of my 🎓
🧵
with: @AndreasHilpold @paniccia_chiara @julesibk @Oberluchs @uniinnsbruck @univienna @EuracAlpine

https://doi.org/10.1007/s10531-022-02498-3

From diverse to simple: butterfly communities erode from extensive grasslands to intensively used farmland and urban areas - Biodiversity and Conservation

The severe biodiversity decline in European agricultural landscapes demands a specific evaluation of the various land-use practices. Many butterflies in Europe, as an important ecological indicator and pollinator taxon, require human interventions to sustain their populations in cultivated landscapes. However, land-use changes and management intensification are currently responsible for their decline. In this study, we compare butterfly communities occurring on 93 sites in seven widely distributed land-use types, viz. extensive meadows and pastures, semi-intensive meadows, vineyards, arable land, settlements and apple orchards. We recorded a high butterfly diversity in supposedly high nature-conservation value (HNV) grasslands (extensive meadows and pastures). All other land-use types showed significantly lower diversity, with decreasing diversity from semi-intensive meadows to apple orchards. Moreover, functional traits uncovered a general trend: extensive grasslands supported communities of more specialized and sedentary species whilst all other non-HNV land-use types showed communities characterized by mobile generalists. Community composition was driven by the land-use type and explained by plant-based indicator values for nutrients and light and temperature variables. Important life-history traits further correlated with site variables confirming the shift from specialists to generalists along increasing land-use intensity gradients and the effect of the thermal environment on phenological traits. We found supporting evidence for the effectiveness of regional Agri-Environmental Measures for butterfly conservation in European cultural landscapes and for the European conservation schemes to focus at least partly on the preservation of HNV grasslands with extensive management. Furthermore, we clearly show the poor ecological state of butterfly communities in more disturbed land-use types (including urban areas) and propose adopting measures to improve butterflies’ conservation in these environments.

SpringerLink

'Can pasture-fed livestock farming practices improve the ecological condition of grassland in Great Britain?'

https://besjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/2688-8319.12191

New #openaccess paper led by my colleague Lisa Norton out in the BES journal Ecological Solutions and Evidence. I did field work for this in 2018, meeting many interesting 'Pasture for Life' farmers, and sampling soil and vegetation on their land.

#grassland #grazing #pasture

The Golden Plover at Titchwell looked stunning in the sunshine today...
A December Moth and a Scarce Umber were in the picnic area at Titchwell...