Monarchs & Humans, the habits we share.
My interactions with monarch butterflies lead me to the conclusion that in terms of planning and wisdom, monarchs share a lot with us humans. Monarchs depend for their future on swan plants. So, being concerned for them, some years ago, I planted a swan plant in early spring expecting that it would be big enough to provide sufficient food to see the caterpillars through to the chrysalis stage. But I was wrong, very wrong! The monarchs laid so many eggs on the plant that the caterpillars had stripped the plant bare before they were mature enough to form a chrysalis. And of course they ate the leaves regardless of whether or not eggs had been laid on them. In desperation, they even chewed on the stems and trunk of the swan plant which subsequently withered and died, as you do when you are eaten alive.
The following year I doubled the food supply. However, not much changed though 3 caterpillars managed to get to the chrysalis stage before the food supply was completely consumed. That’s three new butterflies from dozens of hatched caterpillars and heaven knows how many eggs. And eggs continued to be laid when the food supply was already clearly insufficient to provide for the current population, let alone for any new mouths.
So, in the third year, I planted more swan plants but this time, I was a bit cunning. I planted one under the eaves of the house and away from other plants, and another between fennel and comfrey plants. I was planning a sort of benevolent alien intervention. It worked well. The butterflies either didn’t find them or didn’t like the camouflaged swan plants so the plants didn’t get egged. Then as I had planned, I intervened by selecting some caterpillars from the over populated plants and carried them against their will to the strategically planted ones. The strategy worked and very large numbers of chrysalises resulted. (See the photo of the chrysalises hanging from the eaves under which there was one of the hidden swan plants.) The other plants were again stripped bare but as a result of my benevolent intervention I had never seen so many monarchs flying around in my garden. Whenever I looked out the kitchen window there would be at least two or three chasing each other. Which brings me back to where I began. What is the characteristic we share? Like them, we are consuming, exploiting and destroying the natural resources essential to life on this planet. So, the only hope for the future, theirs and ours, seems to depend on a benevolent intervention by an intelligent alien power.
My strategic interference saved many monarchs but who will save us? And to where?
PS. There does however appear to be one point of difference between us. As far as I can make out, when they fly they make no negative impact on the environment.Monarchs & Humans, the habits we share. My interactions with monarch butterflies lead me to the conclusion that in terms of planning and wisdom, monarchs share a lot with us humans. Monarchs depend for their future on swan plants. So, being concerned for them, some years ago, I planted a swan plant in early spring expecting that it would be big enough to provide sufficient food to see the caterpillars through to the chrysalis stage. But I was wrong, very wrong! The monarchs laid so many eggs on the plant that the caterpillars had stripped the plant bare before they were mature enough to form a chrysalis. And of course they ate the leaves regardless of whether or not eggs had been laid on them. In desperation, they even chewed on the stems and trunk of the swan plant which subsequently withered and died, as you do when you are eaten alive.
The following year I doubled the food supply. However, not much changed though 3 caterpillars managed to get to the chrysalis stage before the food supply was completely consumed. That’s three new butterflies from dozens of hatched caterpillars and heaven knows how many eggs. And eggs continued to be laid when the food supply was already clearly insufficient to provide for the current population, let alone for any new mouths.
So, in the third year, I planted more swan plants but this time, I was a bit cunning. I planted one under the eaves of the house and away from other plants, and another between fennel and comfrey plants. I was planning a sort of benevolent alien intervention. It worked well. The butterflies either didn’t find them or didn’t like the camouflaged swan plants so the plants didn’t get egged. Then as I had planned, I intervened by selecting some caterpillars from the over populated plants and carried them against their will to the strategically planted ones. The strategy worked and very large numbers of chrysalises resulted. (See the photo of the chrysalises hanging from the eaves under which there was one of the hidden swan plants.) The other plants were again stripped bare but as a result of my benevolent intervention I had never seen so many monarchs flying around in my garden. Whenever I looked out the kitchen window there would be at least two or three chasing each other. Which brings me back to where I began. What is the characteristic we share? Like them, we are consuming, exploiting and destroying the natural resources essential to life on this planet. So, the only hope for the future, theirs and ours, seems to depend on a benevolent intervention by an intelligent alien power.
My strategic interference saved many monarchs but who will save us? And to where?
PS. There does however appear to be one point of difference between us. As far as I can make out, when they fly they make no negative impact on the environment.
Some Choice News!
DOC is rolling out a new tool to help figure out what to tackle first when it comes to protecting our threatened species and the things putting them at risk.
Why does this matter? As Nikki Macdonald from The Post points out, we’re a country with around 4,400 threatened species. With limited time and funding, conservation has always meant making tough calls about what gets attention first.
For the first time, DOC has put real numbers around what it would take to do everything needed to properly safeguard our unique natural environment. The new BioInvest tool shows the scale of the challenge: 310,177 actions across 28,007 sites.
Now that we can see the full picture, it brings the big question into focus: how much do we, as Kiwis, truly value protecting nature — and what are we prepared to invest to make it happen?
We hope this brings a smile!
Levin 1110-1
Levin, photographed this morning (Sunday) from about halfway up the Arapaepae track to the Trig.
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