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The El Segundo Blue is a very rare butterfly.
It only occurs on a tiny number of places on the coast
near Los Angeles. The largest surviving colony is
actually within the grounds of Los Angeles International
Airport.
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This is a picture of the El Segundo Blue. It
is drinking nectar from the flowers of Coastal
Buckwheat. This plant serves both as a source
of food for the adults and for the caterpillars.
The butterfly is closely associated with this
plant and rarely occurs far away from it.
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The El Segundo Blue has survived a number
of threats a proposed Golf Course on the airport site
would have severely damaged it. The development was
amended and butterfly habitat has been included in
the rough areas of the course. Also Common Buckwheat
had been planted there . The El Segundo Blue cannot
use this plant as it flowers too early in the season,
but it attracted a series of other butterflies and
moths which moved onto the Coastal Buckwheat when
it came into flower. This caused problems for the
rare butterfly. Not only was its only source of food
being eaten by other creatures but its caterpillars
suffered from the parasites they attracted.
The El Segundo Blue is protected under
the US Endangered Species Act.
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