My second instalment from my 24 hour bonanza is
butterflies. Once I had decided to go for the displaying Mountain Marsh Runner
I was keen to have good weather so I could also search for butterflies as I
knew there were a number of new species I could hope to see in the general
area. Luckily all that week there was a heat wave so weather was perfect for
butterflies even early in the mornings.
I started my butterfly search the first afternoon by
revisiting the site where I saw Apollo last July. I had no idea if any were already
on the wing but was looking forward to finding out. And I was not to be disappointed
with at least 4 individuals seen. Unfortunately they were flying a long way up
the very steep mountain side but this just made it even more dramatic to watch
them gliding high above me. Once one did come down low and flew past me but none
ever stopped long on a flower and seemed more interested in chasing each other.
This site is very good for butterflies generally and
I added my first new species with a Northern Wall Brown (bergringvinge). This
species is not particularly rare in southern Norway although does appear to be genuinely
so Oslo (I can find only one good record although there are a number of other
reports but these all are clear misidentifications of the similar Large Wall
Brown (klipperingvinge). As it flies early in the year it is normally not on
the wing when I have visited appropriate sites away from Oslo but this time I
was lucky 😊
After this I stopped at a roadside site where there
was a report of the very scarce Violet Copper (fiolett gullvinge) in 2020. The
report was of a single butterfly and when I arrived and saw the habitat of a cut
verge by very average looking commercial spruce forest I did not think it
looked very promising at all. As soon as I got out of the car though I saw a
butterfly and sure enough it was my target. I had clearly not done by homework
as it was a much smaller and to be honest duller butterfly than I had expected
(I was expecting to find it more impressive than the already very impressive
Purple-edged Copper (purpurgullvinge) but that was not the case). I walked a
150m stretch of the verge which had recently been rather harshly cut and saw a
handful of individuals and then noticed that behind a row of trees there was a
powerline and that it had been cleared of trees underneath. I walked back under
the cables and boy was that a good decision – the area was crawling with them
and I had at least 100 in the 150 metres back to the car. I have looked at
records of this species from Norway and cannot find a site where more than 20
have ever been recorded so it looks like I must have bumped into the best site
in Norway…!! The area appeared to be nothing special (I saw hardly any other
butterflies) and the powerlines and similar vegetation seemed to extend for kilometres
in both directions so there are likely to be thousands in the area. I think
this is a species where people have traditionally gone to the same small number
of sites to see the species and have not searched elsewhere so there must be
the chance of a number of similar good sites existing elsewhere.
The next afternoon I visited one of the well known
sites for the species, which was again a road verge by spruce forest, and saw only
2 individuals in again ca.150 metres. I had a hope of finding Chequered Skipper
(gulflekksmygger) here but did not succeed.
My big hope for new butterflies was to be from
visiting an extensive forest marshland. I thought I had a chance of 4 new
species although knew I would be unlikely to succeed with all of them and thought
that two would be good and it ended up being good! There were not many
butterflies to see on the marsh and to begin with I saw just a few Green
Hairstreaks and a Swallowtail but then a relatively large and dark fritillary
flew past. I very much suspected that this was one of targets namely Frigga’s
Fritillary (friggs perlemorvinge). It was flying fast and briefly pausing to
check out things and was I am sure a male looking for a female. I initially
tried to run after it but after 5 minutes realised the futility of this as it
never stopped but did seem to follow a route. Instead I stood still and
eventually I saw it stop on a flower and it stopped long enough for me to
run up to it and get some very satisfactory photos. One down! Very disappointingly
I saw no other fritillaries or ringlets (I had a vague hope of finding Bog
Fritillary (ringperlemorvinge), Arctic Ringlet (disas ringvinge) or Lapland
Ringlet (emblas ringvinge)) but there was still one species to look for and
eventually the small thing that flew up in front of me was not a moth of some
kind but a skipper and Northern Grizzled Skipper (moltesmyger) was number 2 for
the marsh and number 4 for the trip.
I have now seen 71 species of the 103 seen in Norway
and am looking forward to finding some more!
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Frigga's Fritillary (friggs perlemorvinge) |
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I am not sure whether we are just seeing the light shining through the hind wing or if it is an abberation |
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I had previously managed this single picture when it paused in flight which doesn't show any strange markings on the upperwing so maybe I did see 2 different individuals |
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and my first Northern Grizzled Skipper (moltesmygger) |
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and now Violet Coppers (fiolett gullvinge) - here a mating pair |
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a male I believe |
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this must be a female |
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female |
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male? |
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the very unassuming habitat which the butterflies clearly loved |
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and from the second well visited site |
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my first Northern Wall Brown (bergringvinge) |
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the three lines coming off the front of the wing plus the shape of the black line inside of the eye help distinguish from Large Wall Brown (klipperingvinge) |
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distant Apollo |
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