EU Grassland Butterfly Index 1991-2024 Technical report
(2026)- Abstract (Swedish)
- Butterflies have been systematically monitored in Europe for several decades using standard protocols that are now adopted in over 30 countries. Butterflies are ideal biological indicators: they are well-documented, measurable, sensitive to environmental change, occur in a wide range of habitat types, represent many other insects, and are popular with the public because of their beauty.
Records from over 16,150 standardized butterfly transects are gathered by National BMS and integrated into a central database as part of the European Butterfly Monitoring Scheme (eBMS) run by Butterfly Conservation Europe (BCE) and the UK Centre for Ecology and Hydrology (UKCEH). The database provides trends on individual species, which can be combined... (More) - Butterflies have been systematically monitored in Europe for several decades using standard protocols that are now adopted in over 30 countries. Butterflies are ideal biological indicators: they are well-documented, measurable, sensitive to environmental change, occur in a wide range of habitat types, represent many other insects, and are popular with the public because of their beauty.
Records from over 16,150 standardized butterfly transects are gathered by National BMS and integrated into a central database as part of the European Butterfly Monitoring Scheme (eBMS) run by Butterfly Conservation Europe (BCE) and the UK Centre for Ecology and Hydrology (UKCEH). The database provides trends on individual species, which can be combined to give trends for different habitats.
In this report, trends for 17 species have been used to generate an updated Grassland Butterfly Index (GBI) for 1991-2024, using data from all 27 EU countries. The GBI is mentioned explicitly in the EU Nature Restoration Regulation (NRR) in Article 11 on the Restoration of Agricultural Ecosystems as one of the three indicators that Member States can elect to monitor. Member States choosing the GBI as one of their two mandatory indicators shall achieve an increasing trend at the national level until the satisfactory levels as set in accordance with Article 14(5) are reached.
The EU Grassland Butterfly Index shows a decline of 47% since 1991. In North-western Europe, the decline is primarily attributed to habitat loss resulting from the intensification of agricultural grasslands, nitrogen deposition and pesticide drift in nature reserves. In Northern Europe (Scandinavia, Finland and the Baltic states), Eastern and Southern Europe and the Alps, the abandonment of grasslands is also a strong driver as shrubs and secondary forest encroachment result in net habitat loss for grassland butterflies. The decline observed over the last 34 years likely reveals only part of the historical decline in grassland butterflies, as many populations were extirpated from the landscape before 1990.
The GBI is the indicator on the EU Dashboard Target 5 for evaluating progress with improving agroecosystems for biodiversity. It is also part of the EU Sustainable Development Indicator set for evaluating the implementation of the Global and EU Biodiversity Strategy.
This report provides an essential message from scientists to policymakers - that butterflies are still declining at an alarming rate across the EU and that urgent action is required to protect and restore habitats to reverse this trend, not only for butterflies but also for other wild insect pollinators and their ecosystem services. The completion and appropriate management of the Natura 2000 network across Europe are crucial for helping grassland butterflies. Restoration and creation of landscapes with mosaics of habitats, both within and outside Natura 2000 areas, are essential to protect grassland butterflies in the EU.
We are grateful to the many thousands of volunteer butterfly recorders who contribute their records to this important database, to the many BMS schemes, coordinators and funders who support the work, and to the EU for funding the eBMS through the EMBRACE project.
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https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/c0abe1b1-17af-449b-bb9f-590982968051
- author
- organization
- publishing date
- 2026-02-03
- type
- Book/Report
- publication status
- published
- subject
- pages
- 35 pages
- publisher
- Butterfly Conservation Europe & EMBRACE/eBMS (www.butterfly-monitoring.net) & Vlinderstichting report VS2025.023
- DOI
- 10.5281/zenodo.18414228
- project
- Svensk Dagfjärilsövervakning
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- c0abe1b1-17af-449b-bb9f-590982968051
- date added to LUP
- 2026-02-25 09:40:08
- date last changed
- 2026-03-06 03:07:26
@techreport{c0abe1b1-17af-449b-bb9f-590982968051,
abstract = {{Butterflies have been systematically monitored in Europe for several decades using standard protocols that are now adopted in over 30 countries. Butterflies are ideal biological indicators: they are well-documented, measurable, sensitive to environmental change, occur in a wide range of habitat types, represent many other insects, and are popular with the public because of their beauty. <br/>Records from over 16,150 standardized butterfly transects are gathered by National BMS and integrated into a central database as part of the European Butterfly Monitoring Scheme (eBMS) run by Butterfly Conservation Europe (BCE) and the UK Centre for Ecology and Hydrology (UKCEH). The database provides trends on individual species, which can be combined to give trends for different habitats.<br/>In this report, trends for 17 species have been used to generate an updated Grassland Butterfly Index (GBI) for 1991-2024, using data from all 27 EU countries. The GBI is mentioned explicitly in the EU Nature Restoration Regulation (NRR) in Article 11 on the Restoration of Agricultural Ecosystems as one of the three indicators that Member States can elect to monitor. Member States choosing the GBI as one of their two mandatory indicators shall achieve an increasing trend at the national level until the satisfactory levels as set in accordance with Article 14(5) are reached.<br/>The EU Grassland Butterfly Index shows a decline of 47% since 1991. In North-western Europe, the decline is primarily attributed to habitat loss resulting from the intensification of agricultural grasslands, nitrogen deposition and pesticide drift in nature reserves. In Northern Europe (Scandinavia, Finland and the Baltic states), Eastern and Southern Europe and the Alps, the abandonment of grasslands is also a strong driver as shrubs and secondary forest encroachment result in net habitat loss for grassland butterflies. The decline observed over the last 34 years likely reveals only part of the historical decline in grassland butterflies, as many populations were extirpated from the landscape before 1990.<br/>The GBI is the indicator on the EU Dashboard Target 5 for evaluating progress with improving agroecosystems for biodiversity. It is also part of the EU Sustainable Development Indicator set for evaluating the implementation of the Global and EU Biodiversity Strategy.<br/>This report provides an essential message from scientists to policymakers - that butterflies are still declining at an alarming rate across the EU and that urgent action is required to protect and restore habitats to reverse this trend, not only for butterflies but also for other wild insect pollinators and their ecosystem services. The completion and appropriate management of the Natura 2000 network across Europe are crucial for helping grassland butterflies. Restoration and creation of landscapes with mosaics of habitats, both within and outside Natura 2000 areas, are essential to protect grassland butterflies in the EU.<br/>We are grateful to the many thousands of volunteer butterfly recorders who contribute their records to this important database, to the many BMS schemes, coordinators and funders who support the work, and to the EU for funding the eBMS through the EMBRACE project.<br/>}},
author = {{van Swaay, Chris A.M. and Schmucki, Reto and Roy, David B. and Dennis, Emily B. and Collins, Sue and Fox, Richard and Kolev, Zdravko D. and Sevilleja, Cristina G. and Warren, Martin S. and Whitfield, Aidan and Wynhoff, Irma and Arnberg, Harriet J.H. and Balalaikins, Maksims and Barea, José Miguel and Barkmann, Friederike and Boe, Andreas M. B. and Bonelli, Simona and Botham, Marc S. and Bourn, Nigel A.D. and Cancela, Juan Pablo and Caritg, Roger and Dapporto, Leonardo and Ducry, André and Dušej, Goran and de Flores, Mathieu and Dopagne, Claude and Escobés, Ruth and Eskildsen, Anne E. and Zdenek, Fric F. and Fernández-García, José María and Fontaine, Benoît and Glogovčan, Primož and Gohli, Jostein and Gracianteparaluceta, Ana and Grill, Andrea and Harpke, Alexander and Harrower, Colin and Heliölä, Janne K. and Hoye, Toke T. and Judge, Michelle and Kati, Vassiliki and Krenn, Harald W. and Kühn, Elisabeth and Kuussaari, Mikko and Lang, Andreas and Lehner, Daniela and Lysaght, Liam and Maes, Dirk and McGowan, Denise and Melero, Yolanda and Mestdagh, Xavier and Middlebrook, Ian and Monasterio, Yeray and Monteiro, Eva and Montes, Aitor and López Munguira, Miguel and Musche, Martin and Olivares, Francisco J. and Ozden, Ozge and Pladevall, Clara and Pavličko, Alois and Pettersson, Lars B. and Rakosy, Laszlo and Roth, Tobias and Rüdisser, Johannes and Šašić, Martina and Scalercio, Stefano and Schönwälder, Manfred and Settele, Josef and Sielezniew, Izabela and Sielezniew, Marcin and Sobczyk-Moran, Gaëlle and Stefanescu, Constanti and Švitra, Giedrius and Svabadfalvi, András and Tiitsaar, Anu and Titeux, Nicolas and Tzirkalli, Elli and Tzortzakaki, Olga and Ubach-Permanyer, Andreu and Vičiuvienė, Eglė and Vray, Sarah and Zografou, Konstantina}},
institution = {{Butterfly Conservation Europe & EMBRACE/eBMS (www.butterfly-monitoring.net) & Vlinderstichting report VS2025.023}},
language = {{eng}},
month = {{02}},
title = {{EU Grassland Butterfly Index 1991-2024 Technical report}},
url = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18414228}},
doi = {{10.5281/zenodo.18414228}},
year = {{2026}},
}
