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How to draw a Monarch Butterfly, How to Draw a Butterfly Webbywanda.tv


Click here to go to the how to draw a Butterfly Video Lesson Coming Soon!

You can help butteflies by planting a "BUTTERFLY GARDEN"

Create a Butterfly Garden

Butterflies are some of the most beautiful and interesting creatures on Earth. By planting a butterfly garden with all of the right kinds of plants and flowers that butterflies love to feed on and lay eggs on, you will certainly have a yard full of butterflies throughout the growing season. Butterfly gardens can be any size - a window box, part of your landscaped yard, or even a wild untended area on your property. 

Creating a butterfly garden should start with some serious research to learn which kinds of butterflies are native to your area. You can learn that from the article:

CLICK HERE: “Butterfly Gardening by Area”.

Make a list of all of the different kinds of butterflies you would like to attract, and then learn which flowers and plants they both feed on and lay eggs on. All of the plants will certainly be native to your area and therefore easy to grow with the right conditions and care. Adult butterflies will visit for a longer period if they find plants to lay their eggs on. These are called ‘Host Plants’ and you can read about them in this article on:

CLICK HERE: “Butterfly Host Plants.” 

 

Information from: www.butterflybreeders.org/public/expertanswers.html

Many people choose to release farm raised Butterflies, read more about how these amazing little winged creatures help our environment.

Live Monarch Butterflies - not only do they not add waste to our landfills, they are incredibly beneficial to life on earth. They are important pollinators that help plants reproduce as they flutter from flower to flower. Then, when they die, they become a nutritious food source for other animals such as birds, lizards, and even other insects.

Releasing butterflies helps keep the earth green by pollinating plants.

Butterfly farming is THE greenest industry in the wedding and party planning market. There is no question that a butterfly farm is not only not harmful to our ecosystem, but it's actually beneficial to the environment. We help reduce pollution. Even better - when the butterflies are released into the environment, they become a vital part of the circle of life. As they flutter from flower to flower, they are unknowingly helping the plants to breed, form seeds, and start new seedlings. And then those plants, also unknowing, help draw carbon dioxide (greenhouse gas) out of the air and process it for food and energy. It's an amazing lifecycle - and one that you can be a part of by releasing live monarch butterflies!

 

 



BUTTERFLY SCIENCE FACTS FOR KIDS

Monarchs are large, beautifully colored butterflies that are easy to recognize by their striking orange, black, and white markings. They live in North, Central, and South America as well as Australia, some Pacific Islands, India, and Western Europe.

The wingspan of a full-grown monarch can reach nearly five inches (13 centimeters), although the average is closer to four inches (10 centimeters). Their markings include bright orange wings covered with black veins and rimmed with a black border and white dots. Females have thicker veins in their wings.

A monarch's brilliant coloring tells predators: "Don't eat me. I'm poisonous." The butterflies get their toxins from a plant called milkweed, which is their only food source in the caterpillar stage. An animal that eats a monarch butterfly usually doesn't die, but it feels sick enough to avoid monarchs in the future.

The most amazing thing about monarch butterflies is the enormous migration that North American monarchs undertake each year. Every fall, as cold weather approaches, millions of these delicate insects leave their home range in Canada and the United States and begin flying south.

They continue until they reach Southern California or central Mexico, more than 2,000 miles (3,200 kilometers) away! These international travelers return to the same forests each year, and some even find the same tree that their ancestors landed on.
Some estimates say up to a billion butterflies arrive in the mountain of Mexico each year. Scientists aren't sure how migrating monarchs know which way to go, since they only live a few months and none makes the journey more than once.
Toward the end of winter, the monarchs in Mexico and California mate. The males then die, while the females head north, depositing eggs on milkweed plants along the way and eventually dying themselves. From these tiny, round eggs come small green-and-white-striped caterpillars, which feed on the milkweed leaves.

For about two weeks, they eat constantly and grow by shedding their skin. They are then ready to transform into pupae. To become a pupa, also called a chrysalis, a monarch larva attaches itself with silk to a leaf or branch, sheds its skin, and forms a hard shell.



 



1) Do captive-raised Monarchs migrate? Yes!

(Dr. O.R. Taylor, Monarch Watch, University of Kansas)

Yes, this is now well established. Please see the PDF files of the recoveries from 1998 on the Monarch Watch website (www.monarchwatch.org). Under the column for Reared, you will find a modest number of yes's for Monarchs that were recovered in Mexico. We have answered the "Do they migrate?" question in several places. Below is the standard reply version we send.


Do indoor-reared Monarchs migrate?
Yes, they do!
We know that Monarchs begin to migrate when day length decreases in late August. Temperatures and the quality of food plants are decreasing at this time as well. One, or a combination of two or more of these factors, leads to reproductive diapause and migratory behavior in Monarchs. But what about Monarchs that are reared indoors? The lighting, temperature, and food plant conditions for these Monarchs may be significantly different than outdoors. Will these Monarchs still migrate? This question was addressed in last year's Season Summary, but we were not able to pose a conclusive answer. However, this year we know of six Monarchs (SEE "RECOVERIES" ON PAGES 5-7) that were raised indoors, tagged, and recaptured a significant distance away; one of these was recaptured in Mexico. In general, these Monarchs were reared under what are probably common classroom conditions. Temperatures ranged from 60-75, caterpillars were exposed to sunlight from a window or daytime classroom lighting, and food plants were obtained from outdoors. Although we cannot say that Monarchs reared under any conditions will migrate, it appears that some classroom conditions are such that butterflies reared indoors will enter reproductive diapause and will migrate.


2) Do Monarchs that are transported great distances from their natal origin migrate to Michoacan, Mexico? Yes!

(Dr. O.R. Taylor, Monarch Watch, University of Kansas)

The prevalent view seems to be that DNA is encoded to produce a system that responds to a set of physical cues in a manner that has the effect of guiding the Monarchs to appropriate overwintering locations. (This said, let's be clear that many Monarchs are blown off course, or don't survive the migration for a variety of reasons.)


3) Does release of non-natal origin butterflies invalidate scientific biogeographic studies? No!

(Dr. Bruce Walsh, Associate Professor, Dept. of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Arizona)

The short answer to the issue of releases confusing studies of local population structure is that this is indeed correct with the older methods of using protein markers (electrophoretic markers) to look at population structure. However, the point is somewhat moot for several reasons.

First, releases are likely to be such a very small proportion of the population as to not likely be sampled in any random sample of the population used to examine local structure.

Second, suppose that indeed a very genetically different strain is released and somehow incorporated into a random sample from the population that is used for looking at population structure. Typically, researchers use genetic markers to reconstruct what amounts to a phylogenetic tree of relationships among individuals (marker genotypes) in the sample. Any distinct individual from the new population will show up as major outliners on the tree, with no connecting individuals. If such a tree is not attempted to be reconstruct, these individuals can give larger Fst (a statistical for population structure) than is indicated by the true population. However, studies failing to attempt to reconstruct the local phylogeny are very poorly done and are unlikely to be published under today's standards.

Third, DNA markers are now the norm. Unlike protein markers, one can use dead museum material in many cases for DNA. Hence, material predating any release is likely available if the research simply looks in local collections. Further, using tightly-linked genetic markers (SNPs, for single nucleotide polymorphisms), it is again straightforward to find those individuals that are very distinct, and again we expect gaps between the local individuals and the released individuals.

In summary, unless the released material makes up a significant fraction of the local breeding population (at least over 1 percent and likely over 5 percent), it is unlikely to be obtained in a random population sample. Even if such distinct genotypes are included, standard methods using DNA markers to look at population substructure can detect such extreme, outliers, and hence these do not compromise the studies.

Please also refer to short article provided at the end of this document, by Dr. Bruce Walsh "Transfers of SNPs and STRs."

 

 

This vase-shaped case starts out green with shiny golden dots and slowly becomes white, then see-through. After nine to 15 days, a fully formed butterfly emerges. The entire egg-to-butterfly process, called metamorphosis, takes about a month.

Once out of the pupa, the damp butterfly inflates its wings with blood stored in its abdomen. It must wait for its wings to dry before it flies away. Adult butterflies don't grow. They survive by drinking nectar from flowers, including milkweed, clover, and goldenrod.

Scientists think North American monarchs have been making their amazing annual journey for thousands of years. But logging in Mexico has greatly reduced forests where these butterflies roost. Efforts to protect these lands are helping, but illegal logging still takes a toll. Since 1983, the International Union for Conservation of Nature has listed the monarch migration as a "threatened phenomena."

FAST FACTS
The scientific name for the monarch butterfly is Danaus plexippus.

There are two populations of monarch butterflies in North America—a large one east of the Rocky Mountains and a smaller one to the west. Populations on the west winter in California, while those on the east go to Mexico, Florida, and Texas.

Populations of monarch butterflies in Costa Rica and Australia have also been found to make long winter migrations.

Black-backed orioles and black-headed grosbeaks are among the few birds that will eat monarch butterflies.

A monarch butterfly's brain is no bigger than the head of a pin.

Non-migrating monarchs live only two to five weeks. Migrating ones can live up to nine months.

Migrating monarchs conserve energy by gliding on updrafts of warm air called thermals.

While mating, a monarch male transfers nutrients to the female, which she uses to produce eggs and migrate north.

 

 

 
 
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BUTTERFLY INFORMATION CONTINUED

4) Does genetic drift and natural selection that occurs in summer Monarchs persist? No.

(Dr. Sonia M. Altizer, Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey)

First, I would like to clarify several broad issues related to Monarch population differentiation. Populations may become genetically differentiated as a result of two distinct processes: natural selection and genetic drift. Selection and drift tend to differentiate populations, whereas migration tends to homogenize them. One study (Eanes and Koehn, 1979, using allozyme loci) showed that eastern North American Monarchs are highly genetically variable and local breeding demes become significantly genetically differentiated during the summer generations, but that the entire eastern population becomes effectively mixed during the fall migration.


5) Do Monarchs reaching each colony in Mexico originate from all areas of the northern breeding range? Yes.

[Refer to the report that summarizes the collaborative research between Monarch Watch (Dr. O. R. Taylor) and Environment Canada scientists Leonard Wassenaar and Keith Hobson on the natal origins of Monarchs overwintering in Mexico, provided in full on Monarch Watch website: www.monarchwatch.org]

The report states that:

Monarch butterflies recovered in overwintering sites were identifiable by their distinct hydrogen and carbon chemical signals that link them to their general region of natal origin.

Wassenaar and Hobson were able to construct a map for the natal origins of the Monarchs in Mexico by using both isotopic home signals for over 600 Monarchs obtained from 13 overwintering colonies. The Monarchs reaching each colony appear to originate from all areas of the northern breeding range. Two of the colonies appeared to have somewhat higher proportions of butterflies from more northerly parts of the range, but in general, the Monarchs are well mixed when they reach Mexico. Tagging results also show mixing at the overwintering sites, though they are restricted to fewer colonies and individuals.


6) Do captive-raised Monarchs that are released somehow weaken the wild population? No!

(Question from: Nigel Venters on dplex-l@raven.cc.ukans, answered by Dr. Bruce Walsh)

Nigel Venters:

Bruce, Thanks very much for your posting. In summary what you are saying is, as breeders always introduce new wild stock into their captive stock every year (because successfully overwintering the species is not often achieved, and/or to promote health within the livestock) that captive stock treated this way with a continual interchange of genes with the wild stock will, when released, make no difference at all to the wild populations?

Dr. Bruce Walsh's reply:

Well, you asked for it. "Domesticated Monarchs are bred in different conditions to wild ones. They will, as a result of the fundamental laws of nature be genetically different from those raised under wild conditions?"

Many domesticated species are "feeble" with respect to their wild counterparts for two (very different) reasons. (1) Inbreeding, which requires many generations and is overturned by a single generation of outcrossing to a large random-mating population, and (2) local adaptation due to artificial and natural selection. For example, domesticated turkeys are very different than their wild counterparts due to extreme selection for meatier birds.

In both cases, if ones breeding stock is only a few generations old, this is really insufficient time for significant inbreeding to occur (unless only a very few adults were used to found the stock) and it is unlikely that local adaptation has evolved. Release of inbred Monarchs into the wild poses little threat, as if they are very feeble, they have little chance of mating. If they do mate, most of the effects of inbreeding depression (across many species) are from the fixation of deleterious recessives (for evidence on this point, see Chapter 10 in "Genetics and Analysis of Quantitative Traits" by Mike Lynch and myself), and hence when they mate with wild Monarchs, the deleterious effects of recessive lethals are completely masked.

If the domesticated stocks tend to show local adaptation to rearing conditions that makes them less fit in the wild, then they too will be at a fitness disadvantage. In order for them to spread their deleterious genes into the population as a whole, the fraction of the population that they comprise must exceed their decrease in fitness. Hence, to spread genes with a 10 percent decrease it fitness, the domesticated Monarchs must comprise more than 10 percent of the population, and must do so for many, many generations.

Nigel Venters asks:

"What you are saying is with a continual interchange of genes with wild stock will, when released, make no difference at all to the wild populations?

Dr. Bruce Walsh replies:

Basically, yes. Reared material from colonies that are continually flushed with wild material are extremely unlikely to cause genetic harm to the wild population when released.


7) Do captive-raised butterflies spread diseases and parasites to wild populations?

(Dr. Harry Kaya, Insect Pathologist)

The insect pathology literature has many examples of pathogens being introduced purposely or accidentally into insect populations. There have also been purposeful introductions of various pathogens for biological control of insect pests. Viruses, bacteria, fungi, protozoans and nematodes have been released and have become established in insect pest populations with the specific aim of using these pathogens for insect control. However, this approach has also met with numerous failures demonstrating that it is not easy to introduce insect pathogens into field populations.

The introduction of pathogens into field populations by the release of captive-raised butterflies can easily be avoided prevented. By carefully monitoring the rearing facilities and not bringing other species of insects into this facility, the acquisition of exotic pathogens by the captive-raised butterfly can be avoided. Inspections of laboratory facilities and livestock can be made to verify that both are free of diseases. With vigilant sterilization and housekeeping procedures in place, commercial butterfly breeders can indeed produce disease-free livestock for release to the environment.

What about the release of monarch butterflies infected with the obligate protozoan parasite, OE (Ophryocycstis elektroscirrha)? In this case, this protozoan parasite is already in the natural monarch populations, and there should be no impact of this protozoan with further introductions. Any selection in the laboratory that would create a more virulent isolate of Ophryocycstis elektroscirrha would not be favored in the natural monarch population.

To stay in business, commercial butterfly breeders must use adequate sterilization and cleanliness practices. If they weren't doing this, most "sick" livestock will expire in the laboratory or rearing facility before reaching the adult stage. Thus, they would simply be out of business.

(Note: Following Question 8, please refer to two letters prepared by Dr. Kaya, Insect Pathologist, to Swallowtail Farms, a commercial butterfly breeding operation. These letters describe the examination and testing of Swallowtail Farms' lab-raised Monarch larvae, adult butterflies and pupal casing, and the resulting conclusion that the livestock was free of protozoan spores and there was no detection of any other micro organism. These examination results demonstrate that it is indeed possible to produce "clean" butterflies in labs.)


8) Three levels of concern have been raised about the "transfer" (release of Monarchs from one geographic area into another):

1. Flooding the gene pool with the "wrong" genotypes (in terms of migration patterns);

2. release of new diseases; and

3. release of new mobile genetic elements

Dr. Bruce Walsh answers:

As to point 1, standard population genetics theory states that the migration rate must be sufficiently large to power a deleterious allele into the population. Introducing an allele (or more generally a genotype) that reduces the fitness of an individual (or its descendants) rarely has any impact, as one must pump in huge numbers (so that the fraction release is a sizable fraction of the total population) just to keep the allele around at low levels. It certainly will not take over the population! Hence, point (1) is not backed up by either good science or good modeling.

Point 2 is easily dealt with, as one would imagine that Monarchs reared in more sterile setting are disease-free (or at least only have the local diseases that they pick up where there are actually raised as larvae). Hence, I see point (2) as being moot, especially in the absence of any data suggesting this is a problem or even a potential problem.

Point 3 is a hypothetical point raised, as the concern is that a genetic virus could be spread from one strain into another. Again, there is no evidence that such viruses exist in Monarchs (some have been found in fruit flies).

Finally, the whole issue of transfer is moot if Monarch from different geographic regions are essentially genetically identical. This is easily testable, and one would simply compute what is called an F_(st) (read as F-ST) value, which measures what fraction of the total variation is due to between-population difference. One could easily use microsatellites or other DNA markers to compare within- and between-population variation to see if there are significant differences between eastern and western Monarch.


Monarch Butterfly breeding
Click to view letters from Dr Kaya of U.California Dept. of Nematology, confirming disease-free stock at Swallowtail Farms
Monarch butterfly breeding

Monarch Butterfly breeding facts



Subject: Transfers of SNPs and STRs

(Dr. Bruce Walsh)

Upon reading some of the recent (and past) posts on transfers, I was struck that a major (perhaps the driving) undercurrent is not really biological concern for the population, but rather that such releases would undermine future attempts to look at the historical migration patterns.

As I briefly commented on recently, this need not be the case if some of the more recent molecular marker methods are used. Since most of the list members might not be aware of these, here is a brief introduction.

With our ability to quickly look at the DNA sequence of just about any gene from just about any organism, we can directly score variation at the DNA level. Two types of variation in the sequence of DNA bases have been used as molecular markers - Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs, often pronounced "snips") and Simple tandem arrays (STRs, often pronounced "strips"). SNPs are differences in single base pairs between some individuals in the population at a particular location in the DNA, while STRs are changes in the size of DNA regions showing repeats. For example, GGATATATATCG is a region of DNA with three ''AT" repeats, while GGATATATCG has only three repeats. Such simple short repeats tend to mutate at high rates (and hence give different array sizes), while SNPs have far lower mutation rates. Because of these differences in mutation rates, one can use a linked pair of SNP-STR sites to actually gauge the age of this DNA region relative to a standard from which it was drawn. For example, if (say) at a particular SNP, western populations tend to have an "A" allele, while eastern populations have another base (say "C"), when we can estimate the age of the "A" allele in our sample (from its western origin) by looking at the frequencies of linked SNPs.

This allows us to distinguish between very recent migration events (such as might occur via transfers) from historical migration events (those which have occurred at lower frequencies, but at a relatively constant rate over long periods of time). This approach has been widely used by human population geneticistis (such as the Kidds at Yale) to date both recent and historical human migrations.


Subject: Biogeographic Studies

(Dr. Bruce Walsh)

The short answer to the issue of releases confusing studies of local population structure is that this is indeed correct with the older methods of using protein markers (electrophoretic markers) to look at population structure. However, the point is somewhat moot for several reasons.

First, releases are likely to be such a very small proportion of the population as to not likely be sampled in any random sample of the population used to examine local structure.

Second, suppose that indeed a very genetically different strain is released and somehow incorporated into a random sample from the population that is used for looking at population structure. Typically, researchers use genetic markers to reconstruct what amounts to a phylogenetic tree of relationships among individuals (marker genotypes) in the sample. Any distinct individual from the new population will show up as major outliners on the tree, with no connecting individuals. If such a tree is not attempted to be reconstruct, these individuals can give larger Fst (a statistical for population structure) than is indicated by the true population. However, studies failing to attempt to reconstruct the local phylogeny are very poorly done and are unlikely to be published under today's standards.

Third, DNA markers are now the norm. Unlike protein markers, one can use dead museum material in many cases for DNA. Hence, material predating any release is likely available if the research simply looks in local collections. Further, using tightly-linked genetic markers (SNPs, for single nucleotide polymorphisms), it is again straightforward to find those individuals that are very distinct, and again we expect gaps between the local individuals and the released individuals.

In summary, unless the released material makes up a significant fraction of the local breeding population (at least over 1 percent and likely over 5 percent), it is unlikely to be obtained in a random population sample. Even if such distinct genotypes are included, standard methods using DNA markers to look at population substructure can detect such extreme outliers, and hence these do not compromise the studies.



The Experts

Dr. O. R. "Chip" Taylor
Professor of Entomology
Program Director: Monarch Watch, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS

Dr. Bruce Walsh
Associate Professor

Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ
Member, Center for Insect Science, Committee on Genetics, Committee on Applied Mathematics, Arizona Cancer Center Pancreatic Cancer working group
Associate Editor: Genetics
Associate Editor: Genetical Research
Past Associate Editor for American Naturalist, Evolution, 'Theoretical Population Biology
Past member (4 year term) NIH Genetics Study Section (Population Genetics)
Councilor for the Society for the Study of Evolution (term 2000-2002)
Co-author, "Genetics and Analysis of Quantitative Traits" (M. Lynch and B. Walsh, 1998, 990 pg., Sinauer Associates)

Dr. Sonia M. Altizer
Teaching Fellow and Research Associate
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Princeton, Princeton, NJ

Dr. Harry K. Kaya, Ph.D.
Professor of Entomology
Department of Entomology, University of California



References:

Altizer, S.M. 3-998. Ecological and Evolutionary Interactions between Monarch Butterflies and the protozoan parasite, Ophryocystis elektroscirrha. Ph.D. Thesis. University of Minnesota.

Altizer, S.M., Oberhauser, K.S. and Brower, L.P. 1999. Associations between host migration and the prevalence of a protozoan parasite in natural populations of monarch butterflies. Ecological Entomology. In press. .

Altizer, S.M. and Oberhauser, K.S. 1999. Effects of the protozoan parasite, Ophryocystis elektroscirrha, on the fitness of monarch butterflies (Danaus plexippus). Journal of Invertebrate Pathology. In press.

Antonovics, J. and Bradshaw, A.D. 1970. Evolution in closely adjacent plant populations. VII. Clinal patterns at a mine boundary. Hereidty. 25: 349-362.

BROWER-A-V-Z; BOYCE-T-M. 1991. Mitochondrial DNA variation in monarch butterflies. Evolution. 45(5): 1281-86.

Eanes,W-F, and Koehn, R-K. 1979. An analysis of genetic structure in the monarch butterfly, Danaus plexippus L. EVOLUTION. 32(4): 784-79~.

Hartl, D.L. and Clark, A.G. 1.997. Principles of Population Genetics (book).

Koehn, L.A. and Hilbish, T.J. 1987. The adaptive importance of genetic variation. American Scientist. 75: 134-141.

Leong, K.L.H., Yoshimura, M.A. & Kaya, H.K. (199*7a) Occurrence of a neogregarine protozoan, Ophryocystis elektroscirrha McLaughlin and Myers, in populations of monarch and queen butterflies. Pan-Pacific Entomologist, 73(l), 49-51.

Lynch, M. and Walsh, B. 1997. Genetics and Analysis of Quantitative Traits (book).

Via, S. 1991. The genetic structure of host plant adaptation in a spatial patchwork: Demographic variability among reciprocally transplanted pea aphid clones. EVOLUTION 45(4): 827-852