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06 Sept 2025

Conservationists throw a lifeline to some of our rarest butterflies

High Brown Fritillary Butterfly - Chris Root

High Brown Fritillary Butterfly - Chris Root

Making a difference to local wildlife

A leading South Devon-based conservation charity is hoping to turn around the fortunes of four of the county’s rarest butterflies.
The Devon Fritillary Recovery Project is the work of Devon Wildlife Trust. Its aim is to help struggling populations of high brown, pearl-bordered, small pearl-bordered and marsh fritillary butterflies.
All have seen their populations shrink dramatically in recent decades due to changes in farming, loss of habitat and climate change. The high brown fritillary, for example, has seen its numbers crash by 96 per cent and is now one of the UK’s ‘most threatened species’.
The new project, which is set to run for two years, is receiving support from Natural England’s Species Recovery Programme Capital Grant Scheme. The Species Recovery Programme (SRP), which Natural England has been operating for more than 30 years, focusses on reducing the risk of extinction and promoting the recovery of our most threatened species, through bespoke targeted action for these species. The Programme has been enhanced through the new grants scheme which was launched in April, driving nature’s recovery through collaboration with partner organisations.
A winter of butterfly restoration work will now begin on land managed by Devon Wildlife Trust. Staff and volunteers will be working on 122 hectares – about the same size as 160 football pitches – across 12 of the charity’s nature reserves. These include the Blackadon nature reserve, Dart Valley nature reserve, Emsworthy Mire and Dunsford nature reserve on Dartmoor and the Teigngrace Meadow nature reserve near Bovey Tracey.
Jenny Cawson, Devon Fritillary Recovery Project Officer, said: "Devon Wildlife Trust’s nature reserves offer some of the last homes to our struggling butterflies, so it’s vital that we work hard to keep them in good condition. The launch of our Devon Fritillary Recovery Project signals the start of a huge effort to not only stabilise the populations of these rare species but to restore their numbers. Our goal is for their numbers to grow, and populations spread across the wider Devon countryside. The work we’ll be able to do during this project will leave a positive legacy which will last for years to come.”
Key among the tasks for the charity will be to manage the levels of scrub and gorse across the 12 nature reserves. Helping staff and volunteers will be a new ‘robo-flail’ – a remote controlled machine which is able to venture into steep and difficult to get to corners of the Trust’s wildlife havens.
Jenny said: "The robo-flail will prove an enormous help. It can go where it’s unsafe or impossible for staff to go, especially on very steep slopes. Our aim is not to remove all bracken and gorse from our reserves, but to ensure that there’s a better balance between scrubby and open areas. This is just what butterflies need to thrive.”
Other parts of the project will see Culm grassland meadows restored plus an extensive monitoring effort counting the numbers of butterflies from the four key fritillary species. These measurements will check on the success of the project, monitoring their numbers over a series of summers.

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