Greetings from Flat Aggie! I am writing to you from
Mexico where I am watching the winter monarch hibernation. Monarch butterflies
east of the Rocky Mountains migrate to Mexico and hibernate in Oyamel fir
trees.
Monarch butterflies that live west of the Rocky Mountains migrate to
California where they will roost in Eucalyptus trees, Monterey Pines and
Monterey cypresses. After traveling up to 3,000 miles, the butterflies arrived
in October. Soon they will begin their long journey back to Illinois where I first
started watching them.
The butterflies that return to Illinois will be 5th
generation monarchs. Let’s take a trip back in time to last summer where my
monarch adventure began.
Last summer I was anxiously awaiting the arrival of new
monarch larva along with Mrs. McQueen’s students at Virginia Elementary School
in Virginia, Illinois. Monarchs are complicated insects. They start their lives
looking one way and change into something entirely different; and they do it in
under a month! Monarch eggs can only be found on Milkweed.
Milkweed can be found in sunny open fields,
by the park, on the shoulders of country roads, in the ravine or in your own
backyard if you plant it. Milkweed loves
sun and grows best in warm weather. There are many different types of milkweed,
but I am standing by common milkweed.
Monarch eggs are usually laid on the bottom side of
the milkweed leaves. They are very tiny.
Once the egg hatches, the caterpillar will survive on milkweed. In less than
two weeks, a monarch caterpillar grows to 3,000 times its birth weight.
The
caterpillar will eat and eat and eat. It will also shed its skin 4 times. The
students and I measured the caterpillars to see how much and how often they
grew.
After about two weeks, the caterpillar is ready to
make a chrysalis. It will hang upside down like the letter “J” for about 14
hours.
The caterpillar will change by whirling and twirling in a “pupa dance.”
After about 2 weeks, the butterfly emerges from the
chrysalis.
This butterfly that I am holding emerged a few hours
ago.
The black dots on this monarch tell
me it is a boy!
After 24 hours, the kids and
I released the butterflies.
We fed the butterflies Apple juice before we released
them.
It’s best to release them on sunny days.
All summer, new monarch butterflies are born. The
average lifespan of a monarch is 2-6 weeks.
Monarchs can be seen sipping nectar
from flowers and laying eggs on milkweed. Many community groups plant monarch waystations to help butterflies find a safe
place to feed and lay eggs.
In the fall, it is time to say goodbye to the
monarchs. As the weather gets cooler, the days get shorter and milkweed dries
up, the butterflies know it is time to migrate for the winter. The butterflies
that leave Illinois will travel up to 3000 miles back to Mexico. They are the
only butterflies to make such a long, two-way migration every year.
For more information on Monarch Butterflies, check out
monarchwatch.org and https://journeynorth.org/monarch/
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