Butterfly Ireland

Species catalogue / Ireland

Small Copper (Lycaena phlaeas) in Ireland

Copróg bheag in Gaeilge. The Small Copper, Lycaena phlaeas, is Ireland’s only resident copper and one of the most brightly coloured small butterflies of dry meadow and coastal grassland.

Identify it in four steps

  1. Forewing upperside metallic copper-orange with a row of black spots and a black outer border.
  2. Hindwing upperside dark chocolate-brown with a narrow copper-orange band along the outer margin.
  3. Underside forewing pale orange with black spots; underside hindwing grey-buff with fine dark speckling and a thin orange marginal line.
  4. Wingspan 26 to 32 mm; a small, fast, low-flying species, males territorial around a favoured perch.

Habitat in Ireland

The Small Copper occupies unimproved dry grassland, road verge, upland heath edge, and coastal cliff. Larvae feed on Common Sorrel (Rumex acetosa) and Sheep’s Sorrel (Rumex acetosella), the latter especially on acidic upland and coastal sites.

Two to three broods a year in Ireland, with a late summer and autumn peak that can produce fresh individuals into October in warm years. The species overwinters as a larva low on a sorrel plant.

Where to see it

  • Howth Head, County Dublin: coastal heath and cliff-top grassland hold reliable populations through summer.
  • the Burren, County Clare: limestone grassland with Common Sorrel supports strong midsummer numbers.
  • Wicklow uplands: acidic heath and verge edges with Sheep’s Sorrel produce late-summer sightings.

Recorded in every county in the National Biodiversity Data Centre atlas 2014-2019, and listed Least Concern in the Butterfly Conservation Ireland Red List (2010, revised 2019), though local populations are sensitive to loss of unimproved grassland.

Related species

Recorded in 22 of 26 Irish counties in the National Biodiversity Data Centre atlas, with the strongest concentrations in Munster and eastern Leinster. Numbers dropped through the 2010s and partially recovered from 2019 onward.1

Source: National Biodiversity Data Centre butterfly atlas 2014 to 2019, and Butterfly Conservation Ireland annual review 2024.

Small Tortoiseshell upperside on Common Knapweed, County Wicklow, July

Small Tortoiseshell

Aglais urticae

Ruán beag (Gaeilge)

45 to 55 mm

Mar to Oct

See the species page

Flight period in Ireland

Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec

Peak months are shaded in Wing Orange. Emergence and recorded flight windows vary with latitude and season.

Where it lives in Ireland

Distribution data © National Biodiversity Data Centre, atlas 2014 to 2019, used with permission.

Recorded in 22 of 26 Irish counties in the National Biodiversity Data Centre atlas, with the strongest concentrations in Munster and eastern Leinster. Numbers dropped through the 2010s and partially recovered from 2019 onward.1

Source: National Biodiversity Data Centre butterfly atlas 2014 to 2019, and Butterfly Conservation Ireland annual review 2024.

Every sighting counts

Butterfly Conservation Ireland and the National Biodiversity Data Centre track changes in Irish butterfly populations through recorder submissions. Add a sighting, and a named contributor will verify it within seven days.