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The reserve also supports a colony of the rare dingy skipper butterfly.
It is a stronghold for the dingy skipper butterfly.
It is home to the Dingy Skipper and the Grizzled Skipper.
Butterflies include dingy skipper, grizzled skipper, chalkhill blue and adonis blue.
A colony of Dingy Skipper butterflies, which are rare within Nottinghamshire, inhabits the open grasslands.
The Dingy Skipper, Erynnis tages, is a butterfly of the Hesperiidae family.
Insects to be found include butterflies (common blue, dingy skipper, grayling) and dragonflies (broad-bodied chaser, lesser emperor).
The area is good for butterflies including common blue, chalkhill blue, small, large and dingy skippers, marbled white, gatekeeper, and meadow brown.
The wildlife includes some rare species such as Water vole, Dingy Skipper butterfly, and Ringed plover.
Insects to be found include damselfly, dingy skipper, grasshopper, grayling, ringlet, six-spot burnet moth and small copper.
These include Grizzled and Dingy Skippers, Brown Argus and Green Hairstreak.
Butterflies that may be seen include The Wall, Orange Tip, Dingy Skipper and the Common Blue.
The grassland supports a variety of butterfly species including Dingy Skipper, Dark Green Fritillary and Common Blue.
Dingy skipper, green hairstreak and common blue butterflies have been recorded, as have Natterer's, Daubenton's, brown long-eared and pipistrelle bats.
The grassland flora supports good populations of Small Blue, Green Hairstreak, Dingy Skipper and Marbled White butterflies.
The wildflower meadows and grasslands are the favourable habitats for many butterflies, such as the Large Skipper, the Small Skipper and the Dingy Skipper.
The entomologists described the bees and wasps which inhabit the dry sunny banks, which are also ideal for the rare dingy skipper butterfly and its bird's-foot trefoil food plant.
Pearl-bordered Fritillary, Duke of Burgundy Fritillary, Marbled White, Dingy Skipper and Grayling are just some of species that inhabit the national park.
Several species of butterfly became extinct owing to the loss of habitat to scrub, notably the Adonis Blue, Silver-studded Blue, Dingy Skipper, and Dark Green Fritillary.
The grassy rises, meadows and open coppice areas are ideal for rarer butterflies including White Admiral, Purple Hairstreak, Silver-washed Fritillary, Dingy Skipper and Brown Argus.
Butterflies are particularly notable including Common Blue, Brown Argus, Grizzled and Dingy Skipper, Green and Purple Hairstreak, and Dark Green Fritillary.
With its characteristic chequered black and white pattern this butterfly is quite distinctive although old, faded individuals can be mistaken for the Dingy Skipper or the Sideridis rivularis, the Burnet Campion Moth.
In the summer, the Ercall Woods which line the hill are a favourite habitat for the Speckled Wood and during spring when the forest is laden with bluebells, the Dingy Skipper can arrive in great numbers.
Twenty-five species are known to breed, including colonies of Silver-spotted Skipper and Duke of Burgundy, together with comparatively large populations of Brown Argus, Green Hairstreak, Chalkhill Blue, Marbled White and Dingy Skipper.