Red Admiral
An Observation Concerning Butterflies.
In my town garden, behind Kirkcaldy High Street, I have a Pittosporum tenuifolium 'Silver Queen'. It started off as a small bush but is now more of a tree around 25 feet tall.
It doesn't provide any food source for adult butterflies, nor is it a foodplant for their caterpillars. However, it is a magnet for certain butterflies.
Every day in summer (weather permitting) there are up to a dozen white butterflies resting, basking, courting, mating and just flying round and around the tree. Most of them are small whites but large whites and sometimes green-veined whites join them. One other species is also attracted - the red admiral.
This afternoon, there were four red admirals and two small whites just sitting there.
I don't know whether it is the colour that attracts the whites as it is good camouflage for their closed wings, or whether the tree exudes some chemical/pheromone/attractant. Its colour wouldn't explain the presence of the red admirals.
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