Difference between revisions of "Monarch butterfly" - New World Encyclopedia

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==Description==
 
==Description==
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The monarch butterfly, ''Danaus plexippus'', is placed in the subfamily ''Danainae'' in the family Nymphalidae, or brush-footed butterflies. Historically, this group has often been considered a separate family, '''Danaidae'''. Members of this group lay their eggs on milkweed plants, which provide a food source for the larvae. There are some 300 species of Danainae worldwide, but only four are found in North America—the monarch butterfly, the queen butterfly (''[[Danaus gilippus]]''), the tropical milkweed butterfly (''[[Lycorea cleobaea]]''), and the soldier butterfly (or "tropic queen," ''Danaus eresimus''). The monarch butterfly is the best known member of this family.
  
'''Milkweed butterflies''' are a [[subfamily]], '''Danainae''', in the family [[Brush-footed butterfly|Nymphalidae]], or brush-footed butterflies. They lay their [[egg (biology)|eggs]] on various [[milkweed]]s on which their [[larva]]e ([[caterpillars]]) feed. Historically, this group has often been considered a separate family, '''Danaidae''', and the [[tribe (biology)|tribe]]s placed herein are also sometimes considered distinct subfamilies in the Nymphalidae.
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[[Image:Angangueo Preserve.jpg|thumb|left|Monarchs at the [[Angangueo]] overwintering site in Mexico.]]
 
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The wings of the monarch butterfly feature an easily recognizable orange and black pattern, with a wingspan of 8.5 to 12.5 centimeters (3.34 inches to 4.92 inches). Female monarchs have darker veins on their wings, and the males have a spot in the center of each hindwing from which [[pheromone]]s are released.  
There are some 300 species of Danainae worldwide, but only four are found in North America - the [[Monarch Butterfly]] (''Danaus plexippus''); the Queen (''[[Danaus gilippus]]''); the Tropical Milkweed Butterfly (''[[Lycorea cleobaea]]''); and the [[Soldier Butterfly]] (or "Tropic Queen"; ''Danaus eresimus''). Most of the [[Danaini]] are found in tropical Asia and Africa, while the [[Ithomiini]] are diverse in the Neotropics.
 
 
 
The best known member of this family is the [[Monarch butterfly]]. The larvae and the butterflies retain the poisonous glycosides from the milkweed so they become poisonous to the predators. These milkweed butterflies (Monarch, Queen, Soldier) will eat only milkweed and nothing else.  This is a highly effective defense strategy, shielding them against almost all predators, as potential predators learn to avoid these species quickly after attempting to eat them. 
 
  
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The monarch butterfly, as with the queen butterfly and the soldier butterfly, will eat only milkweed and nothing else. Milkweed has poisonous glycosides which are retained by the larvae and the adults. This is a highly effective defense strategy, shielding them against almost all predators, as potential predators learn to avoid these species quickly after attempting to eat them.
  
 
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The [[viceroy butterfly]], which mimics the monarch butterfly for protection from predators, has a similar size, color, and pattern. However, it can be distinguished from the monarch butterfly by an extra black stripe across the hindwing.  
 
 
 
 
Its wings feature an easily recognizable orange and black pattern, with a wingspan of 8.5–12.5 cm (3.34 in–4.92in). (The [[Viceroy Butterfly]] has a similar size, color, and pattern, but can be distinguished by an extra black stripe across the hindwing.)  Female monarchs have darker veins on their wings, and the males have a spot in the center of each hindwing from which [[pheromone]]s are released.
 
[[Image:Angangueo Preserve.jpg|thumb|left|Monarchs at the [[Angangueo]] overwintering site in Mexico.]]
 
  
 
==Distribution and migration==
 
==Distribution and migration==

Revision as of 19:49, 28 October 2007


Monarch Butterfly
Danaus plexippus Cirsium.jpg
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Superfamily: Papilionoidea
Family: Nymphalidae
Subfamily: Danainae
Tribe: Danaini
Genus: Danaus
Species: Danaus plexippus
Binomial name
Danaus plexippus
(Linnaeus, 1758)

The monarch butterfly is a large butterfly, Danaus plexippus, that is noted for its long migrations and which is characterized by reddish-brown wings with distinctive, thick black veins and white-spotted black borders. It is a member of the milkweed butterflies (family Danaidae or sometimes subfamily Danainae), which lay their eggs on various milkweeds on which their larvae (caterpillars) feed.

The monarch butterfly is perhaps the most well-known of all the butterflies in North America, although the species is found worldwide. Some populations migrate over 1,800 miles in the autumn from northern North America to Mexico and return in spring. Some have made trans-Atlantic crossings.

The larvae and monarch butterflies retain the poisonous glycosides from the milkweed (which the larva will consume and nothing else) so they become poisonous to the predators. Other non-poisonous butterfly species have mimicked the appearance of the monarch butterfly for protection from predators.

Description

The monarch butterfly, Danaus plexippus, is placed in the subfamily Danainae in the family Nymphalidae, or brush-footed butterflies. Historically, this group has often been considered a separate family, Danaidae. Members of this group lay their eggs on milkweed plants, which provide a food source for the larvae. There are some 300 species of Danainae worldwide, but only four are found in North America—the monarch butterfly, the queen butterfly (Danaus gilippus), the tropical milkweed butterfly (Lycorea cleobaea), and the soldier butterfly (or "tropic queen," Danaus eresimus). The monarch butterfly is the best known member of this family.

Monarchs at the Angangueo overwintering site in Mexico.

The wings of the monarch butterfly feature an easily recognizable orange and black pattern, with a wingspan of 8.5 to 12.5 centimeters (3.34 inches to 4.92 inches). Female monarchs have darker veins on their wings, and the males have a spot in the center of each hindwing from which pheromones are released.

The monarch butterfly, as with the queen butterfly and the soldier butterfly, will eat only milkweed and nothing else. Milkweed has poisonous glycosides which are retained by the larvae and the adults. This is a highly effective defense strategy, shielding them against almost all predators, as potential predators learn to avoid these species quickly after attempting to eat them.

The viceroy butterfly, which mimics the monarch butterfly for protection from predators, has a similar size, color, and pattern. However, it can be distinguished from the monarch butterfly by an extra black stripe across the hindwing.

Distribution and migration

Since the 19th century, it is also found in New Zealand, and in Australia where it is known as the Wanderer Butterfly. In Europe it is resident in the Canary Islands and Madeira, and is found as a migrant in Mexico, Azores, Portugal and Spain.

Monarchs are especially noted for their lengthy annual migration. They make massive southward migrations starting in August until the first frost. A northward migration takes place in the spring. Female Monarchs deposit eggs for the next generation during these migrations. By the end of October, the population of the Rocky Mountains migrates to the sanctuaries in the area of Angangueo, Ocampo, Zitácuaro and El Rosario in Michoacán, Mexico. 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 exceeds the normal lifespan of most Monarchs, which is less than two months for butterflies born in early summer. The last generation of the summer enters into a non-reproductive phase known as diapause and may live up to 7 months. During diapause, butterflies fly to one of many overwintering sites. The generation that overwinters generally does not reproduce until it leaves the overwintering site sometime in February and March. It is thought that the overwinter population may reach as far north as Texas and Oklahoma during the spring migration. It is the second, third and fourth generations that return to their northern locations in the United States and Canada in the 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 appear to be inherited, based on a combination of circadian rhythm and the position of the sun in the sky.[1]

Monarch butterflies are one of the few insects capable of making transatlantic crossings. They are becoming more common in Bermuda due to increased usage of milkweed as an ornamental plant in flower gardens. Monarch butterflies born in Bermuda remain year round due to the island's mild climate.

A few Monarchs turn up in the far southwest of Great Britain in years when the wind conditions are right, and have been sighted as far east as Long Bennington. 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 can 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.

Life cycle and reproductin

The life cycle of a Monarch includes a change of form called complete metamorphosis. The Monarch goes through four radically different stages:

  1. The eggs are laid by the females during spring and summer breeding months.
  2. The eggs hatch, revealing worm-like larva, the caterpillars. The caterpillars consume their egg cases, then feed on milkweed, and sequester substances called cardenolides, a type of cardiac glycosides. During the caterpillar stage, Monarchs store energy in the form of fat and nutrients to carry them through the non-feeding pupa stage.
  3. In the pupa or chrysalis stage, the caterpillar spins a silk pad on a twig, leaf, etc. and hangs from this pad by its last pair of prolegs. It hangs upside down in the shape of a 'J', and then molts, leaving itself encased in an articulated green exoskeleton. At this point, hormonal changes occur, leading to the development of a butterfly. The chrysalis darkens (actually becomes transparent) a day before it emerges, and its orange and black wings can be seen.
  4. The mature butterfly emerges after about two pupal weeks and hangs from the split chrysalis for several hours until its wings are dry (often in the morning). Meanwhile fluids are pumped into the crinkled wings until they become full and stiff. Some of this orangy fluid drips from the wings. Finally (usually in the afternoon) the monarch spreads its wings, quivers them to be sure they are stiff, and then flies in a circle and away, to feed on a variety of flowers, including milkweed flowers, red clover, and goldenrod.

The mating period for the overwinter population occurs in the spring, just prior to migration from the overwintering sites. The courtship is fairly simple and less dependent on chemical pheromones in comparison with other species in its genus. Courtship is composed of two distinct stages, the aerial phase and the ground phase. During the aerial phase, the male pursues, nudges, and eventually takes down the female. Copulation occurs during the ground phase and involves the transfer of a spermatophore from the male to the female. Along with sperm, the spermatophore is thought to provide the female with energy resources that aid her in carrying out reproduction and remigration. The overwinter population returns only as far north as they need to go to find the early milkweed growth; in the case of the eastern butterflies that is commonly southern Texas.

Gallery of the monarch butterfly life cycle

Systematics

This butterfly is closely related to one or two very similar species which were formerly considered to form the Danaus (Danaus) subgenus (see Smith et al. 2005). One is the Jamaican Monarch (Danaus cleophile) of Jamaica and Hispaniola.

The other is a butterfly which is almost indistinguishable from the Monarch as an adult (the pupae are somewhat more different) and occurs south of the Amazonas river. This taxon, Danaus erippus ("Southern Monarch"), is often considered a subspecies of the Monarch Butterfly proper. Analysis of morphological, mtDNA 12S rRNA and cytochrome c oxidase subunit I, and nuclear DNA 18S rRNA and EF1 subunit α sequence data (Smith et al. 2005) indicates that it is better considered a distinct species.

However, as a species the Southern Monarch is only comparatively recently evolved. In all likelihood, its ancestors separated from the Monarch's population some 2 mya, at the end of the Pliocene, when sea levels were higher and the entire Amazonas lowland was a vast expanse of brackish swamp that offered hardly any butterfly habitat (Smith et al. 2005).

Following the review of Smith et al. (2005), two subspecies are nowadays recognized:

  • Danaus plexippus plexippus
    The migratory subspecies known from most of the USA
  • Danaus plexippus megalippe
    The non-migratory subspecies which is found from Florida and Georgia southwards, throughout the Caribbean and Central America to the Amazon River. This has several local forms:
    • Danaus plexippus megalippe forma leucogyne
    • Danaus plexippus megalippe forma portoricensis
    • Danaus plexippus megalippe forma tobagi

As seen in the photo above, albino individuals are also occasionally found.

Defense against predators

Monarchs are foul-tasting and poisonous due to the presence of cardenolide aglycones 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.)

Relationship with humans

The Monarch is the state insect of Alabama, Idaho, Illinois, and Texas,[2] and the state butterfly of Minnesota, Vermont, and West Virginia.[3] It was nominated in 1989 as the national insect of the United States of America, and is the national insect of Canada.

Many people like to attract Monarchs by growing a butterfly garden. Others enjoy raising them for pleasure or for educational purposes. For migrating flocks, sanctuaries have been created at favorite wintering locations; Even tourism revenue is thus generated.

Threats

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.

Monarch butterflies are susceptible to Ophryocystis elektroscirrha, a protozoan which parasitizes them. It 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 close, though this varies between butterfly populations and parasite strains.

Gallery

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Smith, David A. S.; Lushai, Gugs & Allen, John A. (2005): A classification of Danaus butterflies (Lepidoptera: Nymphalidae) based upon data from morphology and DNA. Zool. J. Linn. Soc. 144(2): 191–212. DOI:10.1111/j.1096-3642.2005.00169.x (HTML abstract)

External links

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