Sunday, August 11, 2024

UK
MoD balances training with saving rare moth

Grace Parnell
BBC News Online
MoD
Strensall Common near York is the only place in England where the dark-bordered beauty moth is found

The Ministry of Defence (MoD) is trying to save a rare British moth from extinction while also using its site for military training.

The rare dark-bordered beauty moth exists at one last known site in England, the military training area at Strensall Common near York.

The MoD, which owns the Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) said it would be working with the Defence Infrastructure Organisation (DIO) and biologists from the University of York to try to protect the moth.

Retired Major Patrick Ennis, of the DIO and MoD Strensall Conservation Group, said the needs of the military and the moth must be balanced.


"While the primary use of the land is to enable our military to train, we are equally committed to supporting nature recovery by balancing the conservation of species and their habitats with military training requirements," he said.

'Enormous cultural importance'

The moth's numbers have dwindled by more than 90% since records began at Strensall Common in 1894, and only 50 to 100 now remain in the 57-hectares of open heathland.

The moth eats and lays its eggs on creeping willow which grows at the edge of the common's woodland, but the willow is dwindling because of wildfires and grazing by sheep and cattle, and therefore so is the moth.

To help save the moth, the MoD said it was providing funding and materials for the Defence Infrastructure Organisation (DIO) to fence creeping willow which had been advised by University of York biologists.

Volunteers with the charity Butterfly Conservation were also growing more creeping willow from seed.

Dr Peter Mayhew, from the University, said the moth was of "enormous cultural importance".

"[This] was the population where the moth was first discovered in the UK," he said.

"The moth has only survived thanks to the protection of the heathland provided by the military training area.

"Seeing the moth fly on a sunny morning is a never-to-be-forgotten experience which future generations deserve to enjoy."

The local Yorventure charity has also provided funding and conservationists are considering a trial scheme for captive breeding of the moth around York.

The only other place the dark-bordered beauty moth can be found is in Scotland's Cairngorms, where a project saw 160 of the moths released in a bid to increase their population and save them from extinction.

Startling genome discovery in butterfly project reveals impact of climate change in
Europe

Robin McKie
Sun, 11 August 2024 
THE GUARDIAN 

The Chalkhill Blue, one of the UK’s most beautiful butterflies, has declined in numbers.Photograph: Cephas Picture Library Ltd/Alamy


The chalkhill blue has some surprising claims to fame. For a start, it is one of the UK’s most beautiful butterflies, as can be seen as they flutter above the grasslands of southern England in summer.

Then there is their close and unusual relationship with ants. Caterpillars of Lysandra coridon – found across Europe – exude a type of honeydew that is milked by ants and provides them with energy. In return, they are given protection in cells below ground especially created for them by the ants. Chalkhill blues thrive as a result, though their numbers are now coming under threat.

It is an extraordinary catalogue of features, to which scientists have now made a striking addition thanks to a pioneering new project, known as Psyche, which aims to sequence the genomes of all 11,000 species of butterflies and moths in Europe and reveal in fine detail how climate change and habitat loss are affecting them.

As part of Psyche, scientists have found that, depending on location, the cells of the chalkhill blue have different numbers of chromosomes – the packets of DNA that contain their genetic blueprint. In southern Europe, they have a total of 87 chromosomes, adding them one at a time as they head north until their northern limit is reached, where chalkhill blues have 90 chromosomes.

“That very much goes against the dogma which states that a given species has a given number of chromosomes,” said evolutionary biologist Charlotte Wright of the Wellcome Sanger Institute near Cambridge.

“Why this is changing in the chalkhill blue is intriguing. It is clear that, as it has moved in Europe as glaciers retreated since the end of the last ice age, it has added a chromosome one by one while progressing northwards. It is a surprising observation.”

This point was backed by Mark Blaxter, who is also based at the Wellcome Sanger Institute. “If we look back a million years or so, we can tell when two species have split from a single originator. But how does that happen? More to the point, how would we spot what was going on at the time? That is what we are probably seeing here. We are seeing two species in the act of being created from one. We are shining a light on evolution in action.”

Project Psyche research is being carried out at the Wellcome Sanger Institute in collaboration with six other leading European research centres including Oulu University, Finland, and the Institute of Evolutionary Biology in Barcelona. It is named after the Greek goddess of the soul, who was said to have been given butterfly wings by Zeus and was usually depicted by the ancient Greeks wreathed in butterflies.

Before the development of modern genomics, the relationship between moths and butterflies generated considerable debate. “However, DNA technology has made it clear that butterflies are essentially a sub-group of moths, albeit ones that are generally more colourful,” said Wright.

A tenth of all named species on Earth are moths or butterflies and they are uniquely sensitive to changes in habitats, temperature and plants on which they thrive, added Blaxter. “That means the more we know about them the better informed we will be about the changes affecting the natural world in general. The alterations affecting the chalkhill blue are a perfect example of that knowledge.”

Its 87-to-90 complement of chromosomes may seem extreme compared with the 23 pairs possessed by humans. However, large numbers of these genetic packages are common among moths and butterflies, say scientists, with the record being held by another blue butterfly, the species Polyommatus atlanticus. It possesses a staggering set of 229 chromosomes.

Another intriguing example of lepidopteran life is provided by the xerces blue butterfly which was recently rendered extinct. By studying samples from museum collections, scientists have determined – by studying its genomes – that the species had become highly inbred and vulnerable.

“That research took place in the US but the aim of Psyche is to pinpoint other similarly vulnerable species in Europe in the same way and suggest which are the best targets for interventions to save them,” added Wright. “A genome is a perfect starting point for understanding how well an organism is doing in its environment.”

Butterflies and moths are crucial pollinators of plants and are also a key source of foods for birds, so their survival is important, added Wright. “This is blue-skies research that could have very practical outcomes.”


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