Viewing 1 reply thread
  • Author
    Posts
    • #1528

      marigold
      Keymaster

      I didn’t know this about the monarch. Pretty cool read, they are remarkable little creatures. 8)

      ===============================================================

      Each adult butterfly lives only about four to five weeks. But one of the many wonders of the Monarchs is the annual creation of a unique \"Methuselah generation.\" As autumn approaches in their sites of migratory origin, a very special generation of butterflies is born. Unlike their parents, grandparents, great-grandparents, and great-great-grandparents — all of whom had ephemeral lives measured only in weeks — these migratory butterflies survive seven or eight months. In human terms, given our average life span of 75 years, this would be like having children who lived to be 525 years old!

      This generation performs the incredible feat of flying from Canada and the United States to the center of Mexico — after which they begin the northward journey again. Once they reach the United States, a kind of relay race begins: their short-lived offspring, with only four or five weeks to live, continue making the trek northward over several generations.

      The Monarch of Migration

      Of all migrations by small creatures, few are as astonishing as the one performed by the Monarch butterfly. The embodiment of fragility, these insects travel between 1,200 and 2,800 miles or more between their starting and ending points — a feat without parallel. What is even more remarkable is that the ones that return to the places where Monarchs hibernate have never been there before. These are the great-great-great-grandchildren of those that performed the intrepid journey from southeast Canada and the United States to central Mexico.

      Like several species of birds, bats and whales, the Monarch butterfly of Canada and the United States migrates to places where the climate is less extreme. Winters are too cold in the places where the butterflies reproduce; Monarchs would not be able to withstand either heavy snowfall or the lack of plants on which larval caterpillars feed. As such, the Monarch heads south each fall, where it will stand a greater chance of survival-as well as the chance to \"return\" to reproductive sites in North America and give rise to future generations of reproductive adults that will complete the annual cycle.

      The Monarch butterflies that migrate southward in the autumn are guided by the sun’s orbit as they travel through North America. Even on cloudy days they stay on track thanks to an internal biological compass that functions according to the movement of the sun.

      The migration moves at a pace of about almost 50 miles a day, though there are some butterflies that have flown up to 80 miles in a day. Throughout the migration, they continue to store and replenish energy each day by extracting nectar from flowers they encounter along the way. But the butterflies also suffer from illnesses and infections that can be fatal, and must face other dangers including bad weather, predation by birds during hibernation, and big losses in the population due to winter storms.

      At the end of October and the beginning of November, after traveling two months, the butterflies settle into hibernation colonies in the mountains of central Mexico, where the States of Mexico and Michoacan meet. There they will spend the winter hibernating.

      From mid-November until mid-February, the Monarchs’ hibernation colonies remain relatively stable. During the second half of February, when temperatures rise and humidity decreases in the forests, the butterflies come down from the slopes to mate. And the butterflies that survive the hibernation in Mexico return in the spring to the southern United States.

      http://www.worldwildlife.org/species/fi … flies.html

    • #42573

      marigold
      Spectator

      wow that’s quite a journey – we have monarch butterflies here, but they don’t migrate at all. Maybe a few kilometres. Lots of people plant milkweed/swan plants as it is the favourite food of the caterpillars.

      That article doesn’t mention that there are 10s of thousands of butterflies that end up in Mexico – like a swarm.

Viewing 1 reply thread

The forum ‘Miscellaneous Forum’ is closed to new topics and replies.