Trends in butterfly populations in UK gardens—New evidence from citizen science monitoring

Author:

Plummer Kate E.12ORCID,Dadam Daria1ORCID,Brereton Tom3,Dennis Emily B.34ORCID,Massimino Dario1ORCID,Risely Kate1ORCID,Siriwardena Gavin M.1ORCID,Toms Mike P.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. British Trust for Ornithology, The Nunnery Thetford UK

2. Centre for Ecology and Conservation University of Exeter Cornwall UK

3. Butterfly Conservation East Lulworth UK

4. School of Mathematics Statistics and Actuarial Science Canterbury UK

Abstract

Abstract Private gardens are recognised as potentially important refugia for butterflies. Yet little is known about how gardens might be contributing to butterfly conservation, as their restricted accessibility has meant that garden habitats are not well‐represented in traditional monitoring schemes. Garden BirdWatch (GBW) is the UK's largest structured bird survey, comprising over 25 years of weekly bird counts from more than 14,000 gardens, predominantly occupying suburban and rural locations. Since 2007, a subset of GBW participants have additionally recorded the weekly abundances of butterflies. Using data for 14 seasons (2007–2020) from 7971 gardens with consistent butterfly monitoring, we present the first garden‐specific, national trends for 22 widespread butterfly species (37% of all UK butterflies). Half of the species investigated increased significantly in abundance in gardens between 2007 and 2020. Conversely, only one species, Wall (Lasiommata megera), showed a marginal reduction, though this change was not statistically significant. A strong, positive association between these new, habitat‐focused trends and those for UK butterflies more broadly, previously reported by the UK Butterfly Monitoring Scheme (UKBMS), indicates that patterns of abundance in gardens are largely a reflection of the changes that are occurring nationally. However, butterflies do appear to be faring better in gardens compared to the wider landscape. Averaging trends across non‐migratory species revealed that GBW recorded significantly greater increases over time than UKBMS. Effective monitoring of butterflies in gardens can produce reliable and informative population trends, and it provides important evidence of the significant role gardens play in sustaining butterfly populations.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Insect Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference74 articles.

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