07 October 2011

The last Monarch of the year

We found the egg on one of our milkweed plants VERY late in the season, which put the little critter at increased risk, because Monarchs are susceptible to a parasite called Ophryocystis elektroscirrha, which becomes more widespread in the environment as the summer passes.

After this catepillar hatched, it had a healthy appetite, got to a good size, and then pupated.  But the metamorphosis inside the chrysalis seems to be to a certain extent temperature-dependent (presumably the cooler temps slow the enzymatic processes), and early October this far north means very cool nights.  Her metamorphosis was VERY slow, and we weren't certain that she would eclose before frosty weather arrived.

We were delighted when we finally could see the wing pattern developing inside the chrysalis, and yesterday morning she popped out.  (In the photo you can see we remove the chrysalis from the rearing container and use dental floss to tie it to a small twig, which is secured in a drinking glass with adhesive tape.  This arrangement gives the newly eclosed butterfly more room to hang upside-down and fill her wings and harden them up - and it also makes the process easier to view by us and by neighborhood children).

She eclosed really early in the morning, already had her wings firmed up, and had dumped her meconium by the time we found her.  The next step was to move her to a sunny spot on the screen porch where she could soak up some solar energy:
The coloration of newly-emerged Monarchs is intense (click for bigger) and always impresses us.  She was perfect in every way, and showed no visible signs of any of the OE parasites.  Her body was plump, as expected from her big appetite as a caterpillar, and she'll need all of that energy if she's to be successful for the next stage of her life - flying to Mexico for the winter:

Here in the Midwest, early-season Monarchs are true ephemerals, living only long enough to reproduce another generation.  But these late-season ones cannot overwinter, so they have to follow a migratory path that their ancestors have travelled for milennia, to return to the mountains of central Mexico for the winter.  I believe this generation is also metabolically different, having some ability to convert acquired nectar into fat stores for the journey and estivation.

I am just in awe of these creatures.  The metamorphosis itself - from caterpillar to butterfly - enchants every schoolchild (and the child in me).  And then the fact that a creature with a brain as small as that of an American politician is able to find its way from Wisconsin to Mexico just boggles my mind.

When we saw her taking test flights in the screen porch, we carried her out to the deck.  She lifted from my fingers, rose vertically beyond the shadow of the house into the sunlight, and turned to the south.

8 comments:

  1. you might want to check your facts re Monarch and average politician brain size. Looking at congress over the past year I'd be willing to bet that Monarch brain size is appreciably larger...

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  2. After pondering what I wrote, I decided you are right that I was being too generous to the politicians. Text amended.

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  3. ... and yesterday morning she popped out.
    How can you tell a butterfly's gender?

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  4. Piper, it varies between buterfly species; in Monarchs the sexes have slight differences in size and in the veins on their wings, but the usual way to distinguish them is by the "androconial patch" (small black spot) on the hindwing, shown in the fourth photo of my post here -

    http://tywkiwdbi.blogspot.com/2008/08/monarch-emerging.html

    These patches are "scent" organs that as I understand it release pheromones to attract females (a bit of a reversal, I think, since in most species it's the female that releases pheromones to attract males).

    There's some more information here -

    http://www.jstor.org/pss/2458006

    (If you want to impress your friends the next time you see a male monarch, tell them you can see the "little black balls" on the butterfly...)

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  5. Nicely done


    "After pondering what I wrote, I decided you are right that I was being too generous to the politicians. Text amended."

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  6. And they just evolved from the stardust left over from a big bang. Mind boggling indeed.

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  7. Beautiful. I did not seem to have any this year. Thank you.

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