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Essex Skipper (Thymelicus lineola)

I'm really happy that I managed to photograph a butterfly with it's proboscis showing. :-)

 

The Essex Skipper forms discrete colonies that vary from a small number of individuals to several thousand. Where it occurs it can therefore be very common. This species is very similar in appearance to the Small Skipper and, because of this similarity, was not recognised as a separate species until 1889. The male is distinguished from the female by the sex brand on its forewings, which is a short line of specialised scent scales.

 

Despite its name, the Essex Skipper is now found over much of the southern half of England and it was first recorded in Wales in 2000 and in Wexford in south-east Ireland in 2006. On the British mainland it is to generally be found south of a line between Dorset and North Lincolnshire. It is believed that the increase in distribution is being assisted by the steep and grass-covered embankments that are often found on motorways and major trunk roads which acted as corridors – allowing this species to reach new locations more easily.

 

Photographed at Warnham Nature Reserve, Horsham, West Sussex, UK.

www.friendsofwarnhamlnr.org.uk

 

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Uploaded on July 26, 2013
Taken on July 25, 2013