Selection from
FAR FLOWING WATER
the newsletter of the Owashtanong Islands
Audubon Society
THE
ETHEREAL BUTTERFLY


by Judi Manning
Ancient people treasured butterflies and carved their images
into stone and reckoned them to be messengers from the gods. The
British Museum has the oldest known butterfly in its collection -
two skippers from N. Carolina, dating back to the 1600s. Henry
Walter Bates and Alfred Russel Wallace (a co- founder of the
theory of evolution with Charles Darwin) noticed Heliconius
species in one region of the American tropics often resemble each
other; those in another region also resemble each other BUT do
not look like those in the first region. These observations were
the foundation of the study of mimicry. An example of Batesian
mimicry: edible Viceroys resemble inedible Monarchs, thereby
protecting the Viceroys.
Butterflies and moths belong to the family Lepidoptera,
(insects having scale-colored wings). The hundreds of thousands
of complex shaped scales are filled with pigment that diffract
light into the kaleidoscope of colors we see. The scales near the
base of the wings absorb sunlight to warm their flight muscles.
They must maintain high body temperature to stay active so they
like to bask in the sunlight while feeding. Did you know that
handling a butterfly removes some of the scales and the loss of
scales can be fatal. Males and females locate mates by responding
to the bright-wing colors, striking wing color patterns and wing
movements. Males are usually brighter than females. Bright colors
also advertise to birds and other predators that the butterflies
are just fluff: large wings with a small body that is hard to
catch and not worth their effort.
Monarchs are now en route to Michigan from their winter home
in Angangueo, Mexico, 2,500 miles away. Now is the time to think
about attracting these beautiful butterflies, as well as
swallowtails and skippers. Wildlands and wildflowers are
constantly being replaced by housing and shopping areas and any
nectar we can provide helps their dwindling population.
Butterflies are very fragile creatures. They need spaces that
offer: SUNLIGHT, SHELTER from wind and rain; WATER
-puddles, wet sand or mud. Each species requires
specific FOOD PLANTS for caterpillars; and specific NECTAR plants
for adult butterflies. Each species is attracted to the nectar of
a few varieties of flowers and deposit their eggs on specific
plants that contain the right chemical to nurture the feeding
larva. In the spring, summer or fall, depending on the species,
the female can pick the correct plant out of hundreds of plants
in her habitat and place the eggs on the right part of the plant
that is in the right stage of growth. The North American
Euphilotes butterflyies live their entire life on the Eriogonum
plant (Butterflies of NA, pg. 4). The larva eats the flowers and
fruits, subsisting on only one or two parts of the plant; the
adults sip the nectar, (20% sugar) with their tubular proboscis
for energy and moisture By eating these plants, butterflies
contribute greatly to weed control.
Some will accept overripe fruit, sugar water or honey water.
Rick Mikula found that Monarchs prefer watermelon over natural
nectars. He suggests placing a wedge-shaped , slashed piece of
room temperature watermelon in a non-porous dish. OR Cut the
melon into small pieces so the butterflies can make contact with
all sides and put a plastic grate over the dish containing the
melon. Clean the grate after each feeding.
Ron Boender, after retirement in 1988, grew over 400
nectar-producing and larval-food plants on his property in
Florida. This soon evolved into Butterfly World, which has become
the largest educational butterfly and breeding facility in the
U.S.
The butterfly's brain is the size of a pinhead and contains a
complex set of stimulators and regulators. It smells with
antennae, tastes with its feet and has remarkably acute vision
that enables it to zero in on preferred food plants. Their
genetically inherited ability to carry out complex, instinctive
tasks is superior to humans, but their ability to learn is not
very well developed.
Leg and wing movement is controlled by ganglia along the
ventral nerve cord. The adults' eyes capable of seeing the full
color spectrum, are enormous and composed of hundreds of tiny
eyes grouped together that are very sensitive to movement and
color. However, they cannot adjust to distances or see detailed
patterns or shapes very well.
The butterfly's smell and taste sense organs are scattered
over the body. Butterflies cannot hear very well but sense minute
vibrations that indicate the presence of predators. Their bodies,
like all insects, have an external skeleton which (1) strengthens
their bodies and provides extra places for muscles to attach to;
(2) provides protection against falls and predators; and (3)
reduces water lose due to evaporation.
A butterfly lays 100 eggs, but perhaps only one will live to
butterfly stage. The rest are done in by parasites, fungus,
wasps, other predators, or fungus which reduces their food
source. Eggs hatch into caterpillars that grow and pupate. The
pupas (chrysalis) emerge as adults when the environmental
conditions are suitable. Encased in the chrysalis, a structural
transformation takes place from a worm-like caterpillar to a
fragile, winged adult. When the adult emerges, the wings are
still small and limp, but within 30 minutes body fluids pump them
up to full size. The veins and surface quickly stiffen to provide
needed structural support to fly away. Metamorphosis allows the
larva and adult to live in two different environments. The first
as an insatiable eater and the second as a short-lived,
wide-ranging parent. Adult butterflies spend most of their lives
in some aspect of reproduction.
A butterfly's generation is from egg to adult. A generation
for most flower and fruit feeders, is one month, with many
generations each summer; leaf feeders, six weeks to two months;
grass feeders two to three months; root eaters, six months. The
arctic/alpine species have a two to four year life cycle.
Staggered emergence of the males and females take place for
maximized matings . The first butterflies seen are males, both
males and females in the middle of the flight and females at the
end.
"the caterpillar [larva] is the feeding machine, with
large jaws and small, simple eyes, a huge gut, six true legs and
ten false legs or prolegs, each proleg equipped with tiny hooks.
As it crawls, the larva spins silk threads on the larval host
plant and hooks its prolegs into the silk threads."
(Butterflies of NA, Pg 4). If a young caterpillar falls off, it
will die. The larva prefers cooler temps. (68-84 F), feeds
voraciously and grows by shedding its skin and head capsule four
or more times.
Butterfly wings flap 5-20 times per second. The flight
patterns of individual species greatly differ. Two flight
patterns are used to locate a mate: Perching behavior: the male
perches somewhere and darts out at passing animals, leaves, etc.
to get a closer look to determine if it is a mate. Females fly to
the same place and flutter until found by a male. Patrolling
behavior: the male searches for a female by constantly flying.
Butterflies are cold-blooded and are affected by the climate.
They only fly during warm, sunny periods and become inactive when
the clouds cover the sun or when it is cold. They can fly when
the temperature range is 60-108 F, but display aberrant behavior
at either extreme. The ideal internal body temperature is 82-100
F. In late afternoon adults seek places to spend the night,
usually at the tops of small trees, shrubs or other plants to
avoid mice and early morning birds. During rain, they may roost
alone under leaves or crawl into clumps of vegetation.
Butterflies do not adapt well to human environments.
Individual butterfly species are restricted in their habitats,
have specific plant needs and when the plants disappear due to
habitat destruction, they decline. Butterfly habitats include
bare rocks with vegetation growing between them, to grassy,
alpine tundras, bogs, dunes, etc. Temperature and precipitation
are the major factors in determining the distribution of
butterflies and the size of the population. Fifteen North
American species were federally listed as endangered in 1994,
with 70 more as candidates for the U.S. Endangered Species Act.
Backyard gardens probably will not attract the butterflies that
are in trouble, but will help maintain the population size of the
more common butterflies.
In addition to pollinating flowers, butterflies are an
important part of the food chain, contribute to medical and
botanical research on hereditary characteristics and provide
scientists with the opportunity to study insect variation,
fertility, population dynamics and evolution. They also serve as
sensitive ecological indicators, revealing the health or ills of
the habitats where they live, and thus, their fellow inhabitants.
(The Butterfly Garden)
Butterfliers (butterfly watchers) crouch
over a bush, peering into its depths through their binos. They
watch the butterflies with close-focusing binos to observe as
much detail as if they were holding a mounted specimen. This is a
fairly new, fast-growing, nature-based activity. Butterfly zoos -
'aviaries' designed as rain forests where visitors walk through
to see the huge butterflies of the tropics, are increasing. Carl
and I saw the first release of butterflies at the Frederik Meijer
Gardens in mid-March. They had an 'emergence case' with rows of
chrysalises and released the butterflies periodically into the
interior portion of the Gardens where they flew around the
visitors. The butterflies were resting on ferns, underneath
leaves, on flowers. This was a very impressive exhibit.
Butterflying is quite different than birding, according to
Jeffrey Glassberg, who founded the North American Butterfly
Society. He says butterfliers tend to have a "more general
and profound interest in nature than birders because you're
really in the muck of things, always looking down, noticing
what's around your feet - grasses, ferns, flowers, spiders,
beetles, the quality of the earth itself. All of this is
important because butterflies are actually living there".
(Pg 34 Stalking) Approach butterflies from the side so they will
not mistake you for a predator. On a good day, they can identify
up to 50 species. Butterfliers also have life lists and they
conduct a species count each year. The best field guide is the
Golden Nature Guide, Butterflies and Moths, which identifies
caterpillars, the gender of adults; food plants and territorial
ranges.
Annual migration starts in Sept., triggered by day length.
Unlike birds who follow well defined fly-ways, butterflies fly
due south from their summer-time nesting grounds. All of them
tend to congregate on the northern shores of major lakes where
they rest and feed before crossing. There are numerous places in
Canada where large numbers of migrants can be seen. They include
The Bay of Fundy, the entire St. Lawrence River, the Reifil
Sanctuary in British Columbia, Pt. Pelee and Presqu'ile.
In order for a species to have a successful migration, it
takes many generations. For example, the first generation of
Monarchs have long flights and migrate far northward; the
mid-summer generations are sedentary; the third generation flies
south.
To learn more about butterflies, send a self-addressed,
stamped envelope to the Xerces Society, 10 S.W. Ash Street,
Portland, OR 97204, or purchase Landscaping for Wildlife by
Carrol L. Henderson. Ranger Steve Mueller at Howard Christensen
Nature Center is also a local contact for butterfly information.
References for other articles that follow also
Butterfly Beauty, Margaret Haapoja, Mature Outlook, 6/95, pg. 58
Gardens for Butterflies, Pamela Nelson, Michigan Natural
Resources, March/April, 1992, Pgs. 27-31
Heading South, MacLeans, 9/18/95
How to Feed a Visiting Monarch, Mark Wexler, National Wildlife,
8/7/94, Pg. 14-21.
Make Your Garden Fit for Birds, Butterflies, Kathy Bush, GR Press
N'West, 3/9/95, Pg. 13
Stalking the . . . Great Spangled Fritillary?, George Plimpton,
The New York Times Magazine, 9/3/95, Pgs. 38-41.
The Butterflies of North America, a Natural History and Field
Guide, James A. Scott, Stanford Un. Pres, 1986.
The Butterfly Garden, Mathew Tekulsky.
From the Internet:
Giants and Tigers and Zebras, Oh My! Butterfly Farming
Information or How Recycling can Save Thousands of Lives and Cure
Insomnia, Rick and Claudia Mikula, reprinted from Environment PA,
July/August, 1993.
Monarchs and Watermelons, Rick Mikula, Web Naturalist.

Copyright © 1996 Owashtanong
Islands Audubon Society. All rights reserved.
Back to OIAS Home Page