I am trying to identify the butterflies from my National Audubon Society Field Guide. I believe the orange butterfly is a Julia Fritillary and the other one I think is a buckeye.
The black and white striped one is a zebra long wing. This is an interesting fact about the zebra butterfly; the female pupae releases an odor to attract the male. The males mate with the fully developed females while they are still in their pupal cases. During the mating the male releases a chemical which acts as a chastity belt to repel other males.
This looks like a swallowtail to me, since it has the spots along the wings, but since the tail is missing I'm not certain, however I don't see a blue swallowtail in the book.
I wish I could have gotten a better picture of this because it is very interesting. They get a shipment of chrysalises in every two weeks and they glue them to the poles in this box according to species. This is where they emerge and dry their wings before being set free in the observatory. We were told that the butterflies have a very short life span of about two weeks.
5 comments:
White River Gardens is indeed a beautiful place to visit. I hope you were able to also go outside and wander through the gardens.
Oh, my gosh, those are extraordinary photographs. I couldn't believe the one with the "eye" was a butterfly. I thought it was a fungus on the tree. How big is the conservatory? And do all butterflies live only two weeks? It somehow saddens me.
Who knew that Indianapolis should be on my list for must-see garden tourist spots?
Thanks, Robin - you've taken some great butterfly photos. And the hatching rod method for the chrysales was quite fascinating!
Annie at the Transplantable Rose
Thank you all for the nice comments.
Nan, the average life span is only about two weeks. Some live only 3-4 days and a few others can live as long as six months. It is sad isn't it? I thought they lived longer too.
The conservatory is a two story building and while it's not huge, it's a pretty good size.
How interesting. I didn't know butterflies had a life span of only about two weeks. Makes we want to appreciate each one even a bit more.
Is the blue one a Blue Morpho, perhaps? I think I saw some of those in Costa Rica.
Gorgeous photos. Thank you for sharing them.
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