Butterfly Conservation
Hertfordshire & Middlesex Branch
Saving butterflies, moths and our environment

Species

Brimstone Brown Argus Brown Hairstreak Chalkhill Blue Clouded Yellow Comma Common Blue Dark Green Fritillary Dingy Skipper Essex Skipper Gatekeeper Green Hairstreak Green-veined White Grizzled Skipper Holly Blue Large Skipper Large White Marbled White Meadow Brown Orange-tip Painted Lady Peacock Purple Emperor Purple Hairstreak Red Admiral Ringlet Silver-washed Fritillary Small Blue Small Copper Small Heath Small Skipper Small Tortoiseshell Small White Speckled Wood White Admiral White-letter Hairstreak
Silver-washed Fritillary (m) 2006 - Geoff Horn Silver-washed Fritillary (f) 2010 - Alessandro Giusti

Silver-washed Fritillary

Argynnis paphia


Locally common in woodland


Silver-washed Fritillary branch distribution

Distribution and Status

The Silver-washed Fritillary is fairly widespread in the wooded areas in the two counties. In the 1980s few colonies were present, mainly in central Hertfordshire and the Bricket Wood complex. By the start of this century, the butterfly had virtually disappeared from our branch area. However, during the early 2000s expansion in range had begun from the south-west and spread into Hertfordshire with the largest impact in the hot summer of 2006. The last few years have seen more colonies found in Middlesex

Habitat Requirements

Favours woodland clearings and rides with males more likely to be seen in the more open areas. Females on the other hand prefer shadier places to lay her eggs into crevices on a tree trunk, usually of oak, close to where there are clumps of Common Dog-violet

Larval Foodplants

Common Dog-violet Viola riviniana

Adult Food Sources

Thistle Cirsium sp., Bramble Rubus fruticosis, Buddleia Buddleja davidii

Behaviour/Observation notes

Both sexes are usually very active with their graceful and gliding flight and are easy to detect. Males establish territories in woodland clearings whereas females are often seen fluttering in shadier areas near violet flowers close to oak trees

Silver-washed Fritillary branch phenology

Life History

The Silver-washed Fritillary is a single-brooded butterfly emerging from late June until the end of August. Males emerge about two weeks earlier than the females. Females lay eggs in the crevices of a tree bark often facing north 1 to 2 metres above ground. The eggs hatch out in August. The larva eats the eggshell then spends the winter on the tree trunk. In the spring, the larva descends the tree trunk and searches for the foodplants on which to feed. Pupae lay suspended under a leaf or on a twig

Further information

UK distribution map
Full list of larval hostplants and adult food sources on Peter Hardy's database
Stevenage butterflies - additional notes

 


 

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