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Meadow Brown
Behaviour and Ecology
Courtship in the Meadow
Brown begins with the male finding a potential mate and then enveloping
her in an entrancing scent. While this scent may be entrancing for
the female, most human observers (some people are more sensitive
to the scent than others) would describe it as smelling like old
socks or a discarded cigar! The pair then alights on some suitable
vegetation to mate. The fertilised eggs ripen and are laid within
about four days of mating having taken place. Some of the eggs are
placed on a blade of grass while others are simply ejected in flight.
The tiny, sluggish
and distinctly hairy caterpillars are difficult to find during the
early stages of life. They overwinter and emerge on mild days from
the centre of a grass clump, resuming feeding in earnest with the
arrival of spring. It is at this stage, when they are quite a bit
larger than they were, that they switch to feeding at night. This
is also the time when they are more easy to find, their green colouration,
hairy body and tiny white tail tip help to confirm identification.
If disturbed during these nocturnal wanderings, the caterpillars
will instantly drop to the ground and curl up into a ball.
Identification
This species is often
confused with both the Gatekeeper and the Ringlet and there is also
some regional variation that may further confuse the novice observer.
The colouration is centred around brown and orange-brown, with the
males having virtually no orange-brown on the upperwings. Females
have orange-brown in the centre of the upperside of the forewings
and a dusting of orange brown in the centre of the upper surface
of the hindwings. Both sexes have a black eyespot (with a white
centre) on each forewing. When viewed from the underside (or seen
with the wings folded), the forewings of both sexes sport black
eyespots against an orange background, edged with a dusting of brown.
The hindwing is brown of various shades. The strength of the markings
and degree of spotting can be very variable.
| Meadow Brown |
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Meadow Brown |
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Meadow Brown (caterpillar) |
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The use of gardens - results from Garden
BirdWatch
Even though the Meadow
Brown only has a single generation each year, it does have a very
long flight period and is on the wing from late May through to October.
In most years, males begin to emerge from early to mid-June and
peak numbers are reached in late July, a pattern that closely matches
the Garden BirdWatch reporting rate figures for 2003.
| Seasonality in the use made of Garden
BirdWatch gardens by Meadow Browns during 2003 |
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Although less frequently
reported from urban and suburban gardens, the species will use urban
brownfield sites, cemeteries and larger gardens.
| Differences in the use of rural, suburban
and urban gardens during 2003 |
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The Meadow Brown is
found throughout Britain & Ireland, though it is localised in
parts of northern Scotland and Orkney, and absent from Shetland.
Click here
to see a map showing the distribution of Meadow Browns within gardens
at the national level, as recorded by BTO/CJ Garden BirdWatchers
during 2003.
| Regional variation in the use of gardens
by Meadow Browns during 2003 |
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Click here
to see what the region codes on the above graph mean.
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