Common blue (Polyommatus icarus)

Here’s a detailed overview of the Common Blue butterfly (Polyommatus icarus), one of the most widespread and recognizable blue butterflies in Europe:


🦋 Common Blue Overview

  • Scientific name: Polyommatus icarus
  • Common name: Common Blue
  • Family: Lycaenidae (blues, coppers, and hairstreaks)
  • Wingspan: 28–36 mm
  • Flight style: Fast, low, fluttery — often close to grasses and flowers

🌍 Distribution and Habitat

  • Range:
    • Found across Europe, North Africa, the Middle East, and temperate Asia as far east as Mongolia and Siberia.
    • Common throughout the British Isles, continental Europe, and Mediterranean islands.
  • Habitat:
    • Prefers open grassy areas:
      • Meadows
      • Road verges
      • Coastal dunes
      • Heathlands
      • Brownfields and parkland
  • Often thrives in flower-rich grasslands, particularly with legumes, which are important for their larvae.
See also  River spider

🐛 Life Cycle

  • Broods:
    • Up to 2 or 3 generations per year depending on latitude and altitude.
      • Southern Europe: April to October
      • Northern Europe: May to September
  • Eggs:
    • Laid singly on young leaves or flower buds of host plants.
  • Larval food plants:
    • Mostly legumes, especially:
      • Common bird’s-foot trefoil (Lotus corniculatus)
      • White clover (Trifolium repens)
      • Black medick (Medicago lupulina)
  • Larvae:
    • Green, slug-like with short hairs
    • Sometimes tended by ants in a mutualistic relationship
  • Overwintering stage:
    • As larvae in cold climates

🟦 Identification

♂ Male:

  • Bright violet-blue uppersides with thin black border and white fringe
  • Undersides: pale brownish-gray with black spots and a row of orange lunules along the wing edges

♀ Female:

  • Variable: usually brown upperside with orange spots, but often with blue suffusion, especially in warm areas
  • Underside similar to males, though sometimes darker

Key difference from similar species:
The black spot near the base of the forewing underside helps separate P. icarus from similar species like Polyommatus thersites (Chapman’s Blue).


🌸 Behavior and Ecology

  • Feeds on nectar from a variety of wildflowers:
    • Bird’s-foot trefoil, dandelions, knapweed, clovers, and thistles
  • Territorial males patrol and perch awaiting females
  • Can form large colonies in ideal habitats, often with many individuals flying together
See also  Eurasian pygmy owl (Glaucidium passerinum)

Conservation Status

  • IUCN Red List: Least Concern
  • Population trends: Stable in many regions, but:
    • Declines in intensive farmland and urbanized areas
    • Habitat fragmentation and pesticide use affect populations
    • Benefited by conservation of wildflower-rich grasslands and pollinator-focused agri-environment schemes

🔎 Interesting Facts

  • Despite its name, females can appear mostly brown and be mistaken for other species.
  • A bioindicator species, helping assess the health of semi-natural grasslands.
  • Occasionally hybridizes with other Polyommatus species in overlapping ranges.

Would you like:

  • 📷 Photos or illustration
  • 🗺 Distribution map
  • 🧬 Comparison with similar blue butterflies
  • 📋 Checklist of key ID features

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