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Tracking the Monarch’s JourneyThe beautiful monarch butterfly (Danaus plexippus), with its bold orange and black wings, is found in our area from late May through November. Those seen early in the summer have arrived from south of us, where they were born. The arriving females lay their eggs here on milkweed plants where the hatching caterpillars grow fat on the leaves. The toxic chemicals from the milkweed plant accumulate in the caterpillars’ bodies, making them distasteful to would-be predators, such as birds. These toxins remain as the caterpillars metamorphose into adult butterflies. The adult’s orange and black coloration is a warning to predators that it is not a tasty meal. Amazingly, the butterflies that
emerge here in late summer will survive the
winter by migrating thousands of miles to southern
Mexico. There, they will overwinter by the millions
at specific roosting sites of only twenty to
thirty acres in size. (Though the Mexican government
protects these sites, deforestation continues
in the area.) In the spring they will journey
north again to lay eggs in Texas and other southern
states. Having passed on the torch to the next
generation, the winter monarchs will die. The monarchs that reach Connecticut in early
summer are the children or grandchildren of
the overwintering population in Mexico. Each
successive generation heads further north, following
the vital nectar sources of native flowers and
cultivated gardens, which are in full swing
at the time. Goldenrod, coneflower, milkweeds
(including butterflyweed) and butterfly bush
are but a few of the nectar sources attractive
to monarchs. The Connecticut Butterfly Association participates in a monarch tagging program sponsored by Monarch Watch. (The tagging of individual monarchs helps us to better understand their migration routes and how to protect them.) CBA will be at Lighthouse Point Park in New Haven on Saturday, September 18, from 9 A.M. to noon to tag migrating monarchs. They also plan to set up a tagging station at the Meigs Point Nature Center at Hammonasset State Park in Madison on Sunday, September 19 at 9 A.M. Hammonasset is a great place to see migrating monarchs, as it is a coastal site with plenty of nectar sources (in its butterfly garden and surrounding natural areas). The public is invited to participate in both of these tagging events. Bring a butterfly net and help catch the monarchs for tagging, or simply come to observe these majestic insects up close. Submitted by Cindi Kobak |
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