A highway intersection as an alternative habitat for a meadow butterfly: effect of mowing, habitat geometry and roads on the ringlet (Aphantopus hyperantus)
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Published source details
Valtonen A. & Saarinen K. (2005) A highway intersection as an alternative habitat for a meadow butterfly: effect of mowing, habitat geometry and roads on the ringlet (Aphantopus hyperantus). Annales Zoologici Fennici, 545-556.
Published source details Valtonen A. & Saarinen K. (2005) A highway intersection as an alternative habitat for a meadow butterfly: effect of mowing, habitat geometry and roads on the ringlet (Aphantopus hyperantus). Annales Zoologici Fennici, 545-556.
Actions
This study is summarised as evidence for the following.
Action | Category | |
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Alter mowing regimes on greenspaces and road verges Action Link |
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Alter mowing regimes on greenspaces and road verges
A study in 2003 along a highway in South Karelia, Finland (Valtonen and Saarinen 2005) found that roadsides mown in had more ringlet butterflies Aphantopus hyperantus than those mown in mid-summer. There were more ringlets along road verges that were mown in late summer (estimated population size = 840–2720; population density = 1160–4360 individuals/ha) than those mown in mid-summer (estimated population size: 220–1500 individuals; population density: 500–1200 individuals/ha). A lower percentage of butterflies first caught along verges mown in late summer (11–31%) moved out of their original patch than those caught along verges mown in mid-summer (43–63%) (these data were not tested for statistical significance). On 30 days between June and August 2003, butterflies were sampled using mark-release-recapture surveys along a 2.2-km long transect along a highway intersection and adjacent roads. The site was divided into 80–280-m sections based on habitat: an intersection between two roads with either late summer mowing and hay removal or with mid-summer (June) mowing without hay removal, and a highway verge with either partial July and full late summer mowing without hay removal (counted as late summer mowing in the study) or with mid-summer (July) mowing without hay removal. The effect of hay removal was not tested.
(Summarised by: Eleanor Bladon)
Output references
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