Lunch for a dragonfly – an ignominious end for Britain’s biggest butterfly

The demise of the freshly emerged swallowtail makes me ponder all butterflies’ chances of survival

Last week, I witnessed a wondrous and slightly horrifying spectacle of nature.

I was admiring a swallowtail, Britain’s largest native butterfly, as it jinked over a waterway on the Norfolk Broads. Suddenly, an emperor dragonfly cruised in and grabbed the butterfly. There was a mid-air tussle for five seconds, before the iridescent blue dragonfly dropped into the reed bed with its prize.

I cautiously parted the reeds to see what happened next. The dragonfly had vanished with its meal, leaving one quarter of pristine swallowtail wing.

Of course, like every insect, butterflies are food, just as the emperor makes a decent meal for the dashing hobbies that hunt them over the Broads.

There may be relatively few butterfly species compared with moths because day-flying is a hazardous evolutionary decision. Many butterflies have eye-spots that deter predators such as birds or lure them into attacking the outer edges of the butterfly’s wings, which the insect can do without.

Seeing this swallowtail devoured made me wonder why every individual is not immediately grabbed by the many big dragonflies that share their airspace. Was this individual unlucky or naive? It was freshly emerged, so probably the latter. But clearly a swallowtail’s apparently carefree jinking flight is a – mostly successful – dodge to survive in a hostile world.


Contributor

Patrick Barkham

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
My first butterfly of the year
Butterflywatch This year is unlikely to be a brilliant butterfly summer because 2016 was so poor. But insects can rapidly bounce back

Patrick Barkham

06, Apr, 2017 @8:30 PM

Article image
Baffling decline of the small tortoiseshell
Butterflywatch: My spectacles are not rose-tinted when I remember several dozen late-summer butterflies supping on buddleia to gain energy for their winter hibernation

Patrick Barkham

01, Sep, 2016 @8:30 PM

Article image
Worst of times for the butterfly
Butterflywatch: The scientific numbers are not yet in from the UK Butterfly Monitoring scheme, but the Big Butterfly Count recorded its worst figures since it began

Patrick Barkham

27, Oct, 2016 @8:30 PM

Article image
Early sightings hold promise for butterfly spotters
Butterflywatch: Last summer was the fourth worst since scientific monitoring began in 1976, but let’s be delighted and count these small blessings

Patrick Barkham

06, Jul, 2017 @8:50 PM

Article image
Tree-saving campaign focuses eyes on the white-letter hairstreak
Patrick Barkham on how a colony of rare butterflies living in a healthy elm has become a key element for citizens resisting Sheffield council tree felling

Patrick Barkham

04, Aug, 2016 @8:30 PM

Article image
Butterflywatch: here come the skippers in the May parade
Newly reintroduced chequered skippers are fluttering about Rockingham forest as other butterflies emerge in the sunlight

Patrick Barkham

29, May, 2018 @8:30 PM

Article image
Butterflywatch: sunny May is good news for lepidopterists
Most of the 59 native species are in decline but the Duke of Burgundy and marsh fritillary are thriving

Patrick Barkham

28, May, 2019 @8:30 PM

Article image
Butterflywatch: mixed blessings of a long winter
Interrupted hibernation can play havoc with the caterpillar population with the consequences seen in butterfly numbers later in the year

Patrick Barkham

30, Mar, 2018 @8:30 PM

Article image
Rare butterflies to get boost from Wales golf club grassland restoration
Project funded by Natural Resources Wales at Llanymynech golf course will help early-summer butterflies

Patrick Barkham

31, May, 2023 @5:00 AM

Article image
Interesting times for lepidopterists
Conditions over the past few years are putting stress on butterfly populations as food sources are diminished, but certain species are thriving

Patrick Barkham

01, Jun, 2017 @8:30 PM