14 Oct 2020

In Memory of Martin White: the Man Who Loved Butterflies

Martin White inspecting a homemade butterfly breeding pod
Photo: Fabio de Paola / The Guardian (2020)
 
 
Patrick Barkham's piece in The Guardian yesterday on Martin White - a butterfly devotee and maverick rewilder who, sadly, died earlier this week - was both fascinating and moving to read: click here.   
 
White was a man prepared to break the law and place himself at odds with the scientific establishment in order to help the beautiful insects he loved and singlehandedly try to reverse the rapid extinction of British wildlife. One can't help admiring his efforts, despite concerns raised from opponents who feel that whilst well-intentioned, White's methods are counterproductive and potentially do more harm than good.  
 
For clearly, as Barkham points out, whilst the experts in nature conservation have had some success, broadly speaking, they've failed - big time:  
 
"Britain has lost more of its nature than most other countries in the world. Almost every species or measurable wild habitat produces a graph plummeting downwards. Over the last 70 years, 98% of wildflower meadows in England and Wales have been destroyed; three-quarters of ponds and heaths have vanished; half the remaining fragments of ancient woods have been obliterated. The creatures inside this habitat have gone too: since 1970, more than half of Britain's farmland birds have disappeared, while a quarter of mammals are endangered and three-quarters of butterfly species have declined. Overall one in 10 species are threatened with extinction; 500 species have already disappeared from England." 
 
This dramatic and depressing loss of biodiversity - which has only accelerated in the 21st century - shows that whatever it is we've been doing to save wildlife and protect (what remains of) the countryside clearly isn't working. 
 
So perhaps we need aurelians like Martin White breeding native butterflies in their backyards for (re-)introduction at suitable sites around the country. I respect professional conservationists and understand the importance of data gathering and habitat management, but something else - something more - needs to be done at this point, otherwise none of us will ever see a mazarine blue or purple emperor ... 

 
 
 

2 comments:

  1. Thanks for sharing this. For the last few years we've been planting with a purpose: to attract as much wildlife to our garden as possible. There has been some successes. This is because we are more aware now of our own role in helping to prevent species extinction. Small things matter: cycling to work instead of driving, planting to encourage wildlife instead of for aesthetics. And we reaped the benefit during lockdown when the garden became the centre of the world. This awareness comes from people like Martin (who I had not heard of) and blog posts like this reminding us how each decision we make has an effect. Having just finished Mark Lynas's updated Six Degrees, I'm not feeling too optimistic at the moment. But carry on we must...

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  2. I knew Martin as a work colleague in our jobs as Trainee Gardeners at Bassetlaw District Council, Nottinghamshire in the mid 1970's. I last saw him in 1980 when we both went on our separate career paths. I remember he was obsessed by by butterflies then and said he was only training in horticulture so he could learn more about plants and their
    growth and development to help him understand the species which were important to butterflies.
    He was a pleasant, unassuming person whom I came to know and like but without getting really close to. I was deeply saddened to learn of his passing and may he rest in peace.

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