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The rare El Segundo Blue Butterfly is back from the brink of Extinction

25/06/2007 00:00:00

More stories about butterflies and moths

July 2007. Once relegated to a few small and fragile reserves, this nearly extinct butterfly with electric blue wings has expanded its territory to take up residence along the bluffs of a popular beach south of the Los Angeles International Airport, says University of Southern California research assistant professor Travis Longcore. Until June, the species only existed in three special reserves away from the crowds.
The rare and tiny El Segundo blue butterfly has gray, black and orange on one side of its wings and electric blue on the other. Once relegated to private sanctuaries, it is now thriving on bluffs near a popular Los Angeles area beach.
A few hundred have colonised a four-acre area where tourists, surfers and beachcombers can get a close look at the rare species.

‘In the national picture, this project is yet more evidence that the Endangered Species Act works, and that species recovery is not only possible, but sometimes even involves a walk on the beach,’ said Longcore, who also is the science director for the Urban Wildlands Group. ‘This is an important step in breaking down the barriers between people and nature in the city,’ Longcore said.

The butterfly, less than 1 inch across, journeyed from their protected environment to the beach because an old ice plant had been removed and replaced with native vegetation, dune buckwheat, a variety that not only provides the butterfly with nectar but also with a place to lay their delicate eggs.

The butterfly, whose wings sport gray and black spots on one side and an azure blue on the other, was first placed on the Endangered Species list in 1976. Longcore never imagined the tiny butterflies would make the trip to the bluffs and buckwheat on their own. ‘Although the colonisation was a surprise as experts thought the butterflies would need to be introduced by hand, it was not an accident,’ Longcore said. ‘This project is an example of cooperative conservation, where goals are met through carefully crafted consensus and voluntary action.’

Four years ago, Longcore and Redondo Beach resident Ann Dalkey formed the Beach Bluffs Restoration Project to spearhead the restoration of the bluffs along Santa Monica Bay. The Santa Monica Bay Restoration Commission, the Urban Wildlands Group and the Los Angeles Conservation Corps’ Science, Education and Adventure Lab program all supported the effort.

Using at-risk youth and volunteers, they pulled out the ice plant and put in buckwheat, California sunflower, deer weed, lupines, prickly pear cactus, ambrosia and sand verbena.

The re-vegetation project was funded by the Coastal Conservancy, city of Redondo Beach and the Los Angeles County Department of Beaches and Harbours.