Sightings of the bright orange and black monarch butterfly are few and far between this winter and the finger is being pointed at growing numbers of wasps.
Amateur scientists are reporting fewer sightings of monarch butterflies that are tagged and released in March and April to spend winter in trees in parks and golf courses before returning to gardens to reproduce in spring.
Jacqui Knight, of the Moths and Butterflies Trust, says she has been to several of the winter sites around the country and found low numbers of monarch butterflies. She said part of the problem was the enormous build-up of social wasps over the past two warm winters.
"When wasps are looking for protein to feed their young they take monarch caterpillars. This has badly affected monarch numbers," she said.