L. Hugh Newman, whose family ran a butterfly farm in Kent (that
supplied Winston Churchill with butterflies for his garden at Chartwell) kept
detailed records of their lifespans. Resident breeding species typically had
lifespans of less than a month , with the exception of those that overwintered
as adults (10-11 months for brimstone, small tortoiseshell, peacock) and found
that 30 days was the maximum lifespan of painted ladies. They are known to fly
at night and with a favourable wind, they are reckoned to fly about 150km. per
day, so it’s just conceivable that some early spring arrivals here might have made
the one-way journey directly from North Africa, but there’s no doubt that the
true test of whether we are due a ‘painted lady summer’ depends on their breeding
success at various locations in continental Europe, and favourable summer winds.
Most arrive in relays, crossing the Mediterranean to breed in France and Spain first. With their short life cycle - egg to imago in six weeks - their numbers multiply exponentially as they move northwards, a rolling wave of butterflies that reaches our shores in mid- summer.
Spectacular
‘painted lady summers’ are the stuff of lepidopterists’ legends. I recall
walking along the coast near Whitby in 1996, surrounded by hundreds of painted
ladies settling to feed in flowery cliff-top grassland. That invasion reached
Orkney and Shetland. The most recent mass migration that I remember here was in
2009, but size and frequency of such events are subject to favourable winds and
clement weather.

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