iRecord Butterflies

iRecord Butterflies
iRecord Butterflies
Developer: UK Centre for
Category: Education
58.6K installs
Ratings not yet available
1.3K monthly active users
Revenue not available
Install Trends
Weekly +157
Steady
Monthly +755
Steady

iRecord Butterflies Summary

iRecord Butterflies is a mobile Android app in Education by UK Centre for Ecology and Hydrology. It has about 58.6K+ installs Based on AppGoblin estimates, it reaches roughly 1.3K monthly active users . Store metadata: updated May 19, 2026.

Recent activity: 157 installs this week (755 over 4 weeks) showing steady growth View trends →

Store info: Last updated on Google Play on May 19, 2026 .


0★

Ratings: 0

5★
4★
3★
2★
1★

Screenshots

App screenshot
App screenshot
App screenshot
App screenshot

App Description

Help Butterfly Conservation monitor the UK's butterfly populations

Butterflies are in trouble. A third of UK species are threatened and three-quarters are in decline. Butterfly recording is the foundation for protecting these beautiful creatures. The iRecord Butterflies app has been developed by the charity Butterfly Conservation and the UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology to help you identify the butterflies that you see and to submit your sightings through iRecord so that they can be used to protect butterflies and the environment.

The app uses your location and the time of year to help with identification, presenting the butterflies that you are most likely to see at the top of the list. It has galleries of colour photographs showing all UK butterflies, at all stages of their life cycles, and tips to help with the identification of difficult species. You can use the app to record a single butterfly or create a list of different species seen during a visit to a site.

Over half a million sightings have already been submitted through the iRecord Butterflies app and are being used by scientists and conservationists to provide vital information about how the fortunes of UK butterflies have changed over the decades. Your sightings will be used to help understand the causes of decline and to inform conservation action on the ground to help threatened species.