Henning, SFHenning, GA2008-06-262008-06-261989Henning, SF and Henning, GA. 1989. National Scientific Programmes Unit: CSIR, SANSP Report 158, 1989, pp 1850 7988 4511 2http://hdl.handle.net/10204/2287Currently 632 species of butterfly are known to occur within the borders of South Africa. Using the well established IUCN definitions, 102 of these are considered to be exposed to some level of threat, two species as endangered, seven species and subspecies as vulnerable and ninety-one as rare, in addition two species are considered extinct. Thirty-nine species are dealt with as indeterminate due to lack of data; twelve species are treated separately under the heading of non-resident and other species. Distributional details of the species are summarized in tabular form. Each species is dealt with in detail under eight headings: Identification, Distribution, Habitat and Ecology, Status, Threats, Conservation measures, Investigations required (in tabular form) and References. A distribution map indicating details of available records is provided for each species. The non-resident and other species are recorded briefly with available information. This information will hopefully assist the reader in all aspects pertinent to the conservation of the respective taxa. Aspects of insect conservation are outlined together with a comprehensive bibliography.enSouth AfricaButterfliesSANSPRed data bookSouth African Red data book - ButterfliesReportHenning, S., & Henning, G. (1989). <i>South African Red data book - Butterflies</i> (CSIR). National Scientific Programmes Unit: CSIR. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/10204/2287Henning, SF, and GA Henning <i>South African Red data book - Butterflies.</i> CSIR. National Scientific Programmes Unit: CSIR, 1989. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/2287Henning S, Henning G. South African Red data book - Butterflies. 1989 [cited yyyy month dd]. Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/10204/2287TY - Report AU - Henning, SF AU - Henning, GA AB - Currently 632 species of butterfly are known to occur within the borders of South Africa. Using the well established IUCN definitions, 102 of these are considered to be exposed to some level of threat, two species as endangered, seven species and subspecies as vulnerable and ninety-one as rare, in addition two species are considered extinct. Thirty-nine species are dealt with as indeterminate due to lack of data; twelve species are treated separately under the heading of non-resident and other species. Distributional details of the species are summarized in tabular form. Each species is dealt with in detail under eight headings: Identification, Distribution, Habitat and Ecology, Status, Threats, Conservation measures, Investigations required (in tabular form) and References. A distribution map indicating details of available records is provided for each species. The non-resident and other species are recorded briefly with available information. This information will hopefully assist the reader in all aspects pertinent to the conservation of the respective taxa. Aspects of insect conservation are outlined together with a comprehensive bibliography. DA - 1989 DB - ResearchSpace DP - CSIR KW - South Africa KW - Butterflies KW - SANSP KW - Red data book LK - https://researchspace.csir.co.za PY - 1989 SM - 0 7988 4511 2 T1 - South African Red data book - Butterflies TI - South African Red data book - Butterflies UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10204/2287 ER -