It glows like a fire, looks like an autumn leaf and has just awoken from its winter slumber. Now it's on the hunt for food

It glows like a fire, looks like an autumn leaf and has just awoken from its winter slumber. Now it's on the hunt for food

Meet the eye-catching comma – one of the UK's first butterfly species to appear in spring.

Peter Swan/Getty Images


The first butterfly of the year always lifts the spirits – and it’s often a comma. This butterfly seems to glow orange like the embers of a bonfire, instantly lighting up any March day.

On closer inspection, the upper wings are a rich mix of oranges and browns, which, complete with the insect’s ragged wing outline, brilliantly impersonate an autumn leaf. 

In fact, the butterfly is named for the small white mark on the underside of its hind wing, but you’ll need a clear view of a resting individual to see this well.

Commas are seen so early in the year because, like brimstones, peacock butterflies and small tortoiseshells, they hibernate as adults. All it takes is a bit of March sunshine to lift the air temperature, and the hardy insects begin to stir from their winter resting places in hollow trees or among tree roots or piles of brushwood. 

Nectar is still in short supply in March, but primroses and catkins are both popular with freshly emerged commas. These butterflies also love to bask in the warmth, for example on the sunny side of a tree trunk.

Comma butterfly on a willow catkin in the Lake District, England. Credit: Ashley Cooper/Getty Images

Top image: Peter Swan/Getty Images

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