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Butterfly - Information On The Life Cycle From Egg And Caterpillar © 2006

 
Web www.gardensandnature.com

An article containing information about moths and butterflies and their life cycle, including the caterpillar.

Imagine, if you can, a world without butterflies. It would be pretty drab place, indeed.
Butterflies are magnificent as they flit and dart among the flowers, their colorful patterns a perfect foil for the lovely flowers.
These colorful, entertaining creatures are part of an adaptable order of insects called Lepidoptera. There are over 18,500 species of butterflies in the world, the vast majority in the warm, sunny tropics. North America is home to about 750 species. The butterfly is found on every continent except Antarctica. Even frigid Greenland has around six species calling it home.
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Fluttering Butterfly


The butterfly and moths are very closely related insects. The main differences between the two are that moths are nocturnal and drab colored. Their wings fold down horizontally near their bodies and their antennae are "fuzzy". They prefer forested habitats while the butterfly frequents sunny, open fields. The butterfly is usually active during the daylight hours. Their wings fold vertically above their bodies and their antennae are thin, threadlike organs.
There are also many similarities between them. The adults feed mainly on nectar, and both are important pollinators of the flowers they feed upon. Both are prey of a variety of other creatures - mainly birds, spiders, lizards, dragonflies and other insects. Many wasps and flies lay their eggs on the caterpillars, eggs, and pupae and the parasitic larvae of these insects burrow into the victim, consuming it from within. The order Lepidoptera evolved 200 - 300 million years ago. The direct ancestor of the butterfly was an insect similar to the modern caddis fly. Fluttering Butterfly 130 million years ago the flowering plants evolved and butterfly species began to emerge and spread very quickly. Fossil records of butterflies from 48 million years ago are very similar to modern species.
Butterfly antennae have the senses touch, smell and hearing, while their feet do their tasting for them. The long proboscis located on the front of their head allows them to delve deep into flowers for nectar. The butterfly evolves from egg to adult through a process called metamorphosis. This is a four stage process involving egg, caterpillar or larvae, pupae or chrysalis, and adult.
Fluttering Butterfly The male butterfly stakes out a territory and sort of hangs out there, waiting for females. These are located visually using their colorations and patterns to identify them. A courtship ritual dance takes place. During the courtship ritual the butterflies will rub antennae on each other and release pheromones, or chemical signals, which assist in the mating process. After the courtship mating takes place. The female then locates a suitable host plant upon which to lay her eggs. Some butterflies are given a common name reflecting the name of the plant upon which they need to feed.
The eggs laid, the butterfly flutters off to repeat the process again and again. The eggs hatch, releasing a very hungry caterpillar, which begins life by consuming its own egg case. Then it begins feeding voraciously and grows quickly. The larvae will molt as it grows, loosing its skin several times.
Fluttering Butterfly
The pupae stage is entered after the proper size has been achieved. Unlike the moth which spins a cocoon, the butterfly chrysalis is naked. The pupae will take no nourishment during the chrysalis stage - it has consumed all the energy it needs as a caterpillar to make the transformation, called metamorphasis, into an adult.
After a period of time passes, the chrysalis splits open and the fully developed adult emerges, wet and hungry. Several hours are usually needed for the wings to fully extend and dry, allowing the butterfly to flutter away. Life for the butterfly now consists of eating nectar and mating. Unless a bird or other predator has them for lunch first.
Food is located visually. Bright flowers are attractive to the adult as it flies above fields and flower beds. It uses its antennae to smell out the best flowers for feeding and its front feet taste the flower, making sure it is suitable. It uncoils its long proboscis and sucks the nectar into its stomach. This feeding allows its feet and other body parts to collect pollen as it feeds. It thus pollinates the flowers it feeds upon as it goes from flower to flower collecting nectar. Some males need additional nutrients not found in flowers. For these they feed on carrion, feces, and salts in drying mud puddles. These provide certain amino acids, nitrogen and carbon compounds.
Caterpillar - Butterfly Metamorphasis Life Cycle
Fluttering Butterfly In temperate regions butterflies have evolved several strategies for survival. Butterflies can over winter as all four stages of insect, depending upon the species - adult, egg, chrysalis and pupae. Some, like the monarch, don’t over winter at all, preferring to migrate to warmer climes during the cold months. Over wintering types go into hibernation, first forming certain types of chemicals within their bodies which are similar to antifreeze. These chemicals don’t allow ice crystals to form in their bodies, protecting them from the cellular damage the freezing temperatures would inflict upon them. The ones which over winter as adults take shelter in hollow trees, brush, piles of leaves - anything which will afford them protection. These types may emerge on warm winter days and are the first ones out and about in the early spring.
Migrating butterflies include the monarch and painted lady butterfly. These butterflies spend the winter in semi-tropical or tropical regions. In late winter, they begin their northward journey. The adults which begin the journey stop to mate and lay eggs on the way. Few, if any, of these migrating adults ever reach the summer breeding grounds. Instead, the young born from the eggs laid on the way continue the migration, finally reaching it after two or three generations.
These insects have developed many ways of deterring predators. With some it is a combination of the food plant and distinctive coloration. The monarch is a good example of this. Since the plant it feeds upon, the milkweed, is poisonous, the monarch has a very disagreeable taste. Its coloration acts as a warning to birds and other predators which shy away from eating it after one or two unpalatable meals. Some butterflies and caterpillars use camouflage, taking on the color and pattern of the plants and trees it rests in.
Many people enjoy collecting butterflies for display. Collectors should note that the butterflies propagate themselves so effectively that taking one or two for collections will not adversely affect the population provided you take no more than you need. After catching them in a net, place them in a protective envelope to prevent them from beating their wings, and place them in a freezer to quickly kill them. Mount them with a proper pin through the thorax, and label them as to species, date collected, and location. Include any other important notes, such as the vegetation it was feeding upon, etc.
Butterflies may also be bred and raised, the offspring released into natural habitat.
Eggs collected from their food plant in the wild are allowed to hatch. A cage can be purchased or made - be sure it will not allow the larvae to escape and is tall enough to accommodate the food plant. Keeps a fresh supply of leaves coming - larvae are heavy eaters.
Pupae can be sexed by looking at the pointed tip of their bodies. The male will have two bumps near the tip, the female none.
Keep the pupae over winter in a suitable place. It needs to be as close to the natural environment as possible and providing some protection.
Keep the male and female adult butterflies together after they emerge from the pupae stage. Feed them with commercial butterfly nectar. Soak a cotton ball in the nectar solution and place it in the cage. Plants suitable for the butterfly must be in the cage for them to lay eggs, as they are very selective about where they lay their eggs.
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