 |
Red Admiral butterfly, Vanessa atalanta. Gates Green Road, Coney Hall, 10 September 2011. |
Many creatures like ivy. During most of the year, it shelters invertebrates, birds and bats. Then, it flowers late in the year and provides a feast of nectar for insects of many sorts.
So if you watch out for a bank of ivy to come into flower, you are very likely to see this butterfly, the Red Admiral, which seems to be particularly attracted. The Red Admiral is a real beauty, not just for its open-winged appearance which, indeed, is admired by many, but for these amazing underwings, which look like the marbled endpapers in an old book.
 |
Red Admiral butterfly, Vanessa atalanta. Detail. Gates Green Road, Coney Hall, 10 September 2011. |
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