A beautiful, rarely seen, highly endangered butterfly is causing such a flutter a lepidopterist from Sir David Attenborough's Butterfly Conservation in the UK is heading to Northland to study it.
Moths and Butterflies of New Zealand Trust have just had reports of sightings of the forest ringlet butterfly in the Puketi Forest and near Kaikohe, two of only a handful of New Zealand locations where it is known to still survive.
"The forest ringlet is quite unique in that it's only found in this country, and it's the only one of its species in the world. It really is a New Zealand icon,'' said Jacqui Knight, founder of Moths and Butterflies of New Zealand Trust.
The orange, black and white forest ringlet, also called Dodonidia Helmsii or Helms butterfly, is on the brink of extinction but the reason why the population has reached critically low numbers is a matter of speculation.
In the 1970's, the butterflies were frequently seen throughout New Zealand's forests but a massive decline was observed around the 1990s.