The impact of climate change on the thermal ecology of cold-adapted butterflies

Lead Research Organisation: Lancaster University
Department Name: Lancaster Environment Centre

Abstract

The project will investigate how increasing temperatures are affecting northern butterflies in the UK, and test the
potential for managing habitats to promote climate change adaptation. It provides an exciting opportunity for an
ecologist, with an interest in conservation and a desire to undertake crucial research using state of the art
techniques in remote sensing and microclimate modelling, to affect conservation practices.
Cold-adapted species, particularly butterflies, are highly vulnerable to climate change and are becoming a top
conservation priority both in the UK and globally. The project will explore how adult and larval butterflies
thermoregulate in a range of habitats, how thermoregulation behaviour differs among species, and among
populations at different altitudes and/or latitudes (NW England and Scotland).
A key element of the project will be to combine evidence gathered from field data, including experimental
vegetation manipulations, with microclimate modelling and remote sensing data at landscape scales, to understand
how fine-scale variation in topography and habitat structure influence the local distribution, abundance and
population trends of cold-adapted and generalist butterfly species. The final aim is to test mitigation measures for
managing habitats to increase the availability of cooler spots in the landscape and enhance species persistence - in
particular for cold-adapted species.
The student will use a combination of field and modelling techniques, gaining skills in behavioural observation,
microclimate modelling and Lidar/GIS techniques. The project will involve substantial fieldwork in NW England
and Scotland, working with a collaborative team of researchers from Lancaster, Cambridge and Exeter University,
as well as CEH and RSPB.
The successful student will benefit from spending significant time with RSPB, undertaking fieldwork at RSPB's
Haweswater reserve and a one-month placement in RSPB's Centre for Conservation Science in Edinburgh to work
with Steven Ewing. The project will help inform conservation practice in RSPB, and other conservation organisations.

Publications

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Studentship Projects

Project Reference Relationship Related To Start End Student Name
NE/S007423/1 01/10/2019 30/09/2027
2745610 Studentship NE/S007423/1 01/10/2022 31/03/2026 Sophie Mowbray