| MacMan
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| Maculinea Butterflies of the Habitats Directive and European Red List as Indicators and Tools for Habitat Conservation and Management |
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Europe
supports five species of blue butterfly of the Genus Maculinea.
All of these are endangered both locally and globally, and consequently
appear on the European Red List with three of the species being listed in
annexes of the Habitats Directive. Each species currently has at least one
global stronghold in Central Europe with one species (Maculinea rebeli) being endemic to Europe. The
Maculinea are scientifically
interesting because they have
specialised life-styles that involve living underground as larvae and
pupae for 11 months of the year inside red ants’ nests (Myrmica spp). Prior to this, larvae of each species feed solely on
specific food plants. The five species are key representatives of several
of the most valued and endangered types of grassland biotopes in Europe,
ranging from calcareous to acid soils and from very wet to very dry
hydrological regimes . |
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The MacMan project started in February 2002 and has eight major partners in six different countries (Hungary, Poland, France, Great Britain, Denmark and Germany). The project has four main objectives: 1) to increase knowledge in inter- and intraspecific variation in the functional ecology of Maculinea systems across Europe; 2) to assess the suitability of Maculinea butterflies as indicators of biodiversity along a European transect; 3) to develop standards for monitoring Maculinea butterflies as indicators and tools for grasslands and their management, and 4) to promulgate and exploit these monitoring standards. At the end of the project we will know the ecological variability within the species and their suitability as indicators. Thus, we know the geographical range of the applicability of simplifications for habitat management. Major project outcomes:
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| For more information about the MacMan
project, click here.
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