The Glanville fritillary is found across Europe and temperate Asia. It is most commonly found on
Åland (Finland), which host a network of about 4,000 dry meadows, the fritillary's ideal habitat. These butterflies commonly inhabit open grassland at an elevation of above sea level.
Glanville fritillaries in the UK In the UK the Glanville fritillary occurs only on soft
undercliff and
chine grassland and where its main larval food plant
Plantago lanceolata (English plantain) occurs in abundance on sheltered, south facing slopes. The Glanville fritillary is a highly restricted species within the UK, being confined to the
Isle of Wight and even there being largely limited to the southern coast. It also occurs in the
Channel Islands, and since 1990 there has been a mainland site on the Hampshire coast, possibly the result of an introduction. There are small introduced populations on the
Somerset coast and two in Surrey: one near
Wrecclesham, and one at a nature reserve in
Addington, near
Croydon. Historic UK records suggest a distribution which went as far north as
Lincolnshire. However, by the middle of the 19th century the Glanville fritillary was known only from the Isle of Wight and the coast of
Kent between Folkestone and Sandwich. It became extinct in Kent by the mid-1860s. ==Description==