The Monarch butterfly (Danaus plexippus) is a well-known North American butterfly. Since the 19th century, it is also found in Australia where it is also known as the Wanderer Butterfly. Its wings feature an easily recognisable orange and black pattern. The females have darker veins on their wings, and the males have a spot in the center of each hindwing from which pheromones are released.
Monarchs are especially noted for their lengthy annual migration. They make massive southward migrations from August through October. A northward migration takes place in the spring. Female Monarchs deposit eggs for the next generation during these migrations. The population east of the Rocky Mountains overwinters in Michoacán, Mexico, and the western population overwinters in various sites in central coastal California, United States, notably in Pacific Grove and Santa Cruz. The length of these journeys far exceeds the lifetime of a Monarch (lives four days as egg, two weeks as caterpillar, ten days to two weeks as chrysalis, and nine months as a butterfly). The last generation of the summer lives up to 7 months, during which it flies to the overwinter location. This generation does not reproduce until it leaves the overwinter location the following spring. How the species manages to return to the same overwintering spots over a gap of several generations is still a subject of research; the flight patterns are inherited, based on a combination of circadian rhythm and the position of the sun on the sky.A recent study suggests that butterflies have special ultraviolet photoreceptors that provide them with a sense of direction.[http://www.hunews.huji.ac.il/articles.asp?cat=6&artID=500 This is one of the few insects to manage transatlantic crossings. Once very common in Bermuda, they are becoming endangered due to the loss of milkweed, eradicated as a weed. A few Monarchs turn up in the far southwest of Great Britain in years when the wind conditions are right. Monarchs can also be found in New Zealand during summer, but are absent the rest of the year.
On the island of Hawaii no migrations have been noted. Monarchs will live a life of six to eight weeks in a garden having their host asclepias plants and sufficient flowers for nectar. This is especially true if the flower garden happens to be surrounded by native forest that seems to be lacking in flowers.
Once they reach their breeding grounds, the females lay their eggs on milkweed host plants. The egg and larval period is temperature dependent and lasts about 2 weeks. At the end of this period, the larva enter a period of pupation as a chrysalis for 9 to 15 days, after which an adult butterfly emerges to continue the next step of the annual migration.
Monarchs are foul-tasting and poisonous due to the presence of cardenolides in their bodies, which the caterpillars ingest as they feed on milkweed. Both forms advertise their unpalatability with bright colors and areas of high contrast on the skin or wings. This phenomenon is known as aposematism.
Monarchs share this defense with the even more unpleasant-tasting and similar-appearing Viceroy butterfly, in an example of Müllerian mimicry. (Viceroys were at one time believed to be Batesian mimics of Monarchs.)
Many people like to attract Monarchs by making a butterfly garden, and other people like to raise them for pleasure or for educational purposes.
A monarch butterfly appeared in the SpongeBob SquarePants episode Wormy.
Recent illegal deforestation of the Monarch's overwintering grounds have led to a drastic reduction in the butterfly's population. Efforts to classify it as a protected species and to restore its habitat are under way. Mexican authorities expected a significant increase in the Monarch population in the 2005-2006 season. Monarchs are also threatened by the protozoan parasite Ophryocystis elektroscirrha, which is present on the abdomen of adult butterflies and passed to their offspring when the spores rub off during egg-laying and are then ingested by the caterpillars. The effects of the parasite on Monarchs include decreased weight, shortened lifespan, weakened wings, rapid weightloss, or inability to eclose, though this varies between butterfly populations and parasite strains. * *
Monarch butterflies are also susceptible to Ophryocystis elektroscirrha, a protist which parasitizes them.
The Monarch is a supervillain from the Adult Swim cartoon The Venture Bros. He claims to have been raised by Monarch butterflies after surviving a plane crash that killed his parents, although his mannerisms and personality demonstrate almost no knowledge of their biology or behavior.
A monarch butterfly appeared in the SpongeBob SquarePants episode, Wormy.
An episode of Malcolm in the Middle simply entitled "Butterflies" has a plot with Reese raising hundreds of Monarch caterpillars. Eventually, they all become adult butterflies which flock Reese's room and begin to cover up Reese, to his horror. Real caterpillars and butterflies were used, though the enormous fluttering flock near the end was done with computer FX.
Monark (sommerfugl) | Monarchfalter | Danaus plexippus | Monarque (papillon) | Monarchvlinder | オオカバマダラ | Paruparong Monarch
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