Butterflies

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Happiness is as a butterfly which, when pursued, is always beyond our grasp, but which if you will sit down quietly, may alight upon you.
- Nathaniel Hawthorne, author & poet

The butterfly is perhaps one of the planet Earth’s most beautiful creatures. An insect of such rare delicate grace, and colourful beyond imagination in some cases, it is of no surprise it has captured the heart of the poet since people were able to wax lyrical. Poets aren't the only ones to be enamoured by the simple creature, a completely different species of human has evolved over time to study the magnificent butterfly – the lepidopterist. Named after the scientific classification of the butterfly (and moth), Lepidoptera - these unique people study, collect, and can be seen darting about fields with large nets and pith helmets in attempts to capture - the rarest butterflies. However, with some 20,000 varieties from 24 groups, including the superfamilies Hesperoidea and Papilionoidea, it's a job not to be taken lightly.

Flutterby?

Why did the butterfly flutter by? Because he saw the dragonfly drink the flagon dry!
- Children's Verse

Why is the butterfly so-called? The English term most likely comes from the Anglo-Saxon - butterfloege, as during the time period the most common butterfly was the butter-coloured yellow brimstone species. In Russia butterflies are known as babochka or 'little soul' and the Ancient Greeks also referred to them as the 'soul' or psyche. In France they are papillon and in Italy farfalla, while in Romania the fluturi herald the coming of warmer weather. In Germany schmetterling flutter through warm meadows and in Denmark, 'summer-birds' or sommerfugl mark the beginning of the season. In China, the cantonese for butterfly is woo deep, while in Hindi it is titli and Arabic farasha. The native Australians of the Northern Territory (Djingli) know them as marlimarlirni, so whatever the name, it somehow manages to capture their magical quality.

What Makes A Butterfly?

The butterfly is a flying flower, the flower a tethered butterfly.
- LeBrun, poet

The butterfly, like any other creature is made up of important bits and pieces. Humans have eyes, noses, ears, heads, limbs, organs and other workings. Butterflies have these things too, they're just quite a bit different in style to the human varieties.

Body

Butterflies are like many other insects in that they do not have a vertebrae and instead of a skeletal system, all their soft bits are encased in a hard outer shell – an exo-skeleton. A butterfly's body is further divided into three main parts. The head, thorax and abdomen:

  • Head – Yes, much like any other animal head, this bit has the eyes, mouth and proboscis (tongue), and nose and ears (antennae). A butterflies eyes are of the compound sort, containing up to 6,000 individual lenses! Their eyes are also not very sensitive to red and yellow, but instead they see in ultraviolet waves. Their noses are incredibly powerful too, able to decipher the scent of a single variety of flower blossom from amazing distances.
  • Thorax - The chest of the butterfly, where all the muscle-tissue that drives the wings are to be found. The muscles pull the top of the thorax down, thus making the wings flip up. Then the muscles pull the thorax in, pushing the wings back down again - providing power for flight.
  • Abdomen – Fancy name for the stomach, but it contains all the digestive and reproductive systems of the butterfly.
  • Dangling from the body are three pairs of legs, with the tarsi, or feet, at the end. Butterflies feet are unique in that they are like a second tongue, with tastebuds on them! When a butterfly lands on a flower, to save energy rolling out its proboscis to check the sweetness of the nectar, it lets it feet do the tasting. Then, sticking out from the sides of the body are the butterflies most important features. Its wings.

    Wings

    Butterfly wings are quite amazing natural designs. Made up of the forewings and the hindwings, a butterfly's wings are like any other insects, supported by a framework of veins filled with blood, air and nerve fibres. It is the wings covering, however, that helps define a species of butterfly and give them their amazing individual look. Minute scales, that are in fact flattened hairs, are connected to the wings by a short stalk and an overlapping effect completely coats the wing surfaces. The scales are so small they appear like dust to the human eye, and rub off easily if touched. In fact if a butterfly loses too many scales from its wings, its ability to fly is severly hampered, although some naturally shed. A myriad of colours and patterns, in some species the scales (called androconia) also produce a scent to attract potential mating partners. The wings are also the best way of knowing if the insect you see flapping about is a butterfly or its cousin, the moth. Butterflies hold their wings together above their backs when they rest, while moths fold theirs over their backs or let them lay flat across their body. And it is difficult to tell the difference sometimes, because while many moths are nocturnal and are grey or brown in colour, some have brilliant patterns or designs in striking colours, like many butterflies.

    How Does A Butterfly, Fly?

    Butterflies are self-propelled flowers.
    - Robert A. Heinlein, sci-fi author

    The butterfly flapping through the air is a heart-warming sight, but not many people know that butterflies don't actually 'flap' their wings to fly. They use much the same method of flight as birds. The wings, driven by the muscles in the thorax, move through the air in a figure eight pattern, pushing air backwards from the body thus providing forward motion. Some butterflies glide on air currents and others have even managed to notch up speeds as fast as 40 kilometres per hour! However, butterflies can only fly if their body temperature reaches 25-30°C (77-86°F). If the insect is too cold, the muscles powering flight do not work, and it is for this reason that butterflies are daytime creatures, often seen basking in the sun atop flowers or rocks.

    Reproduction

    Everyone is like a butterfly, they start out ugly and awkward and then morph into beautiful graceful butterflies that everyone loves.
    - Drew Barrymore, actress

    The reproductive cycle of the butterfly is complex, but captured beautifully in the children's book The Very Hungry Caterpillar by Eric Carle. From egg through to adult, and the wondrous action of metamorphosis, the butterfly has an intense and incredible life-cycle:

    Egg

    Butterflies begin life as tiny, tiny eggs. The pregnant female butterfly will lay as many as 1,000 eggs from her ovipositor (egg-laying duct) onto either the leaves or stems of their favourite plants. The plant will provide shelter, warmth and food once the eggs have hatched. The eggs will usually hatch a few days after being laid, then the tiny caterpillars will immediately start eating. Butterfly eggs come in an amazing variety of shapes and sizes, some are balls while others look like small twigs or lozenges. They consist mostly of a hard outer-layer called the chorion, which is lined with a thin coating of wax which prevents the egg from drying out.

    Caterpillar

    Once the egg hatches the caterpillar, or larvae, are the next part of the butterflies life-cycle. Multi-legged eating machines, caterpillars spend practically all of their time in search of food. They can eat their own body weight in food several times each day, and will sometimes perform cannabalistic actions in order to grow! Resembling fat worms with legs and hard strong jaws to munch through leaves and fruit, caterpillars mature through a series of stages, shedding their skin until they are large enough to pupate (become a pupa).

    Pupae

    When a caterpillar reaches a certain size it will then find a somewhere to begin its transformation into an adult butterfly. In order to be protected during the process, the caterpillar will find a safe place, such as the underside of a leaf, mulch, or even a hole in the ground. Then they will construct a cocoon around themselves to start the process of metamorphosis which can take either days or, in some species, over a year. The chrysalis, or the pupa inside the cocoon, will slowly alter shape from the original caterpillar into the adult butterfly, complete with wings.

    Adult

    After a butterfly emerges from its pupal stage, it cannot fly for some time, because its wings have not yet unfolded. A newly-emerged butterfly needs to spend some time 'inflating' its wings with blood and letting them dry, during which time it is extremely vulnerable to predators. However, if it passes through this process, with little difficulty it will quickly make its maiden flight and begin the hunt for a suitable mate to begin the process all over again. A male butterfly will mate several times in its lifetime, but the female will only usually lay eggs once, then release a special pheromone that deters other males. Scent has a major role in attracting mates and if a male finds a female that has not mated, it will perform elaborate 'dances' and flights of courtship. If the pair are compatible, they will couple - often flying together in gratis.

    Do Butterflies Eat Butter?

    "Just living is not enough," said the butterfly, "one must have sunshine, freedom and a little flower."
    - Hans Christian Anderson, author

    Butterflies live primarily on nectar from flowers. This is due mostly to the fact that they don't have jaws and teeth to chew, so a piece of well-done steak is never on the menu. Butterflies use their proboscis like a straw to suck up nectar. Butterflies are attracted to flowers of all shapes, sizes and colours, but they are especially keen on one in particular - the aptly named Butterfly Bush, or Summer Lilac. Other flowers that are liked by butterflies are Lantana, Zinnias, Sage, Milkweeds, and Sunflowers. Butterflies have also been known to derive nourishment from pollen, tree sap, rotting fruit, dung and even dissolved minerals in wet sand or dirt. But, no. Not butter.

    If you don't have a garden with flowers, but would like a chance to see some butterflies in the warmer months of the year, why not try making a Butterfly Feeder. All you need is;

    • A plastic cup
    • Some string
    • A plastic bag (preferably yellow or red in colour)
    • Craft glue
    • Scissors
    • Cotton wool ball
    • Sugared water


    To make the feeder, prick a small hole into the opposite sides of the plastic cup at the rim (the top bit where you drink from). Thread the string through the holes so that the cup will hang upright. Then in the base of the cup make a hole about the diameter of a ballpoint pen. Push the cotton wool ball into this hole so half is inside the cup, and half is poking out the bottom. Then get the plastic bag and cut flower petal shapes that will be glued to the bottom of the cup around the cotton wool ball. This will be the artificial flower for the butterflies to feed on. Once the glue has dried and you are happy that your cup now looks like a flower, mix some sugar with water (the ratio should be about 1:9, that is 1 tablespoon of sugar to 9 tablespoons of water) then pour some of the sugared water into the cup. Hang the feeder outside somewhere and wait for some butterflies to come and drink some of the sugary goodness! Be aware though, the feeder may also attract other insects such as bees, wasps and ants, who also have a 'sweet tooth'.

    International Insect

    The toad beneath the harrow knows
    Exactly where each tooth-point goes;
    The butterfly upon the road
    Preaches contentment to that toad.

    - Rudyard Kipling, author

    Butterflies can be found on almost every continent of Earth, except Antarctica1. They have been seen fluttering about in tropical rainforests, fields, woods, grasslands, coastal regions, marshland, deserts and mountain areas globally. Some even migrate vast distances across countries, or even oceans, in order to either escape cold weather or search for new food. However, butterfly habitats are declining, in some part to the ever changing eco-systems of the world, but also due to the fact that many areas are being developed into farming or urbanised regions for humans, particularly the rainforests, where the greatest numbers of butterfly exist. There are too many species of butterfly to name here, but the most common are the Swallowtails, Apollos & Festoons (Papilionidae), Whites & Yellows (Pieridae), Blues, Coppers & Hairstreaks (Lycaenidae) and Fritillaries, Morphos, Monarchs, Browns & Satyrs (Nymphalidae).

    Butterflies That Bite?

    I'll be floating like a butterfly, and stinging like a bee.
    -
    Muhammad Ali, boxer

    Butterflies don't have stingers or pincers or anything that will hurt a predator (well most of them don't), so they use other methods of warding off potential enemies. Amongst butterflies foes are birds, bats, lizards, spiders, hornets, beetles, wasps, fungi, disease, parasites and of course, humans. Birds remain the most dangerous though, eating both adult butterflies and caterpillars, but the insects have developed some cunning ways of defeating their common enemies:

    • Camouflage - What looks like a leaf or a twig on a branch may often not be. It might actually be a butterfly or caterpillar in disguise. Blending into foliage or even moss and rocks hides the butterfly from the prying eyes of potential hungry predators. Some caterpillars have even gone as far as to mimic bird droppings!
    • Faking It - The bright colours and patterns of butterflies to the human eye are beautiful things. But there is reasoning behind this, as quick flashes of colour or patterns that look like the eyes or faces of larger creatures do much to ward off a hungry bird or predator. Other colours represent danger, particularly red, so many butterflies and caterpillars have red stripes or spots to warn of either the fact that they are poisonous, or hope that predators believe they are poisonous!
    • Chemical Warfare - Some caterpillars create toxins in their bodies, while many produce quite noxious smells. Others will not only create poisons, but have barbs and whips that can inject toxins! Some butterflies feed on plants that leave toxins in their bodies, so when eaten there is an awful taste - thus preventing predators from partaking of that particular species in future.

    Butterfly Beliefs

    A butterfly, flapping its wings in Hong Kong, may change tornado patterns in Texas.
    - Edward Lorenz, meteorologist

    Other than being the representation of the beginnings of Chaos Theory (or Butterfly Effect), butterflies have featured in the beliefs of many cultures from around the world:

    • Greece - The Ancient Greeks believed that, after death, the soul would flutter away from the body in the form of a butterfly. Greek myth tells that the beautiful butterfly Psyche had brought about the envy of Aphrodite, and the goddess ordered her son Eros to make Psyche fall in love with him so as to break her heart – but the plan backfired and Eros fell for the gorgeous Psyche instead.
    • Mexico - The ancient city of Tula in Mexico, once home to the Toltecs, contains many statues. The image of a butterfly is represented as a warriors breast-plate on some of these statues, as the Toltecs knew that butterflies lived short but brilliant lives. Hence, the butterfly became the mascot of Toltec soldiers who often lived a brave life and did not fear death.
    • North America - Native Americans hold a belief that if anyone desires a wish to come true, they must capture a butterfly and whisper their wish to it. Since butterflies make no sound, they cannot tell the wish to anyone but the Great Spirit - who will then grant it.
    • China - The tale of Zhu Yingtai is a sad one. She disguises herself as a boy in order to go to college, and whilst there falls in love with fellow student Liang Shanbo. Liang is oblivious that Zhu is a girl, and he only discovers the truth when Zhu is forced to marry a rich nobleman's son. Realising his mistake, Liang dies of a broken heart, and when Zhu finds out she takes her own life. The gods take pity on the tragic pair and they are reunited as butterflies every spring.
    • Ireland - The legend of Etain tells of an Irish lord who became the first butterfly. He was changed into a muddy puddle by his first wife because she was jealous of his new wife and the happiness he had with her. A worm later appeared from inside the puddle, which then transformed into a butterfly that the gods protected from harm.

    Butterflies In Popular Culture

    This magnificent butterfly finds a little heap of dirt and sits still on it; but man will never on his heap of mud keep still.
    - Joseph Conrad, author

    Because the butterfly is such a symbol of quick and fleeting beauty, it has been the inspiration for many human endeavours and is seen as not only romantic, but a muse to many an artist. Butterflies have oft been depicted in paintings, seen in delicate jewellery designs like earings and brooches, embroidered into clothing or even sung about in both classic and modern songs. Folklore about fairies and pixies has the 'little people' flying about as if on butterfly wings, and butterflies are often mentioned in the same circles as magic. The opera Madama Butterfly written by Puccini in 1904, but set in Osaka, Japan in the 1800s, tells the story of American officer James Pinkerton and his love for a beautiful Japanese girl who he nicknames 'Butterfly', while the 1970s BBC Comedy series Butterflies attempted to focus on the lighter side of life.

    Then there is the feeling of a butterfly on your arm, light and somehow a little comforting but terrifying at the same time. This feeling has not only inspired the phrase, 'Butterflies in your tummy', meaning nervousness or fear - but also the action of giving a 'Butterfly Kiss', that is to flutter your eyelashes against the cheek of a loved one. In sports, the swimming action known as the 'Butterfly Stroke' has the competitor rotating their arms through the water by their sides as they kick, ostensibly mimicking the action of a butterfly in flight, but instead really just making large watery splashes. Then there is the 'Social Butterfly', the name given to someone who flits from person to person, the life and soul of a party. All in all though, human representations of butterflies don't hold a candle to the original and best.

    More Butterflies

    I only ask to be free. The butterflies are free.
    - Charles Dickens, author

    For more about butterflies online why not visit the Butterfly WebSite. If you prefer seeing them as they should be, in nature, it is worthwhile taking a trip to a nearby Butterfly House (there are many worldwide) or for a chance to see some in your own garden, try making a Butterfly Garden so as you can truly appreciate this marvellous and incredibly beautiful insect.

    1At least, no species have been discovered there.

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