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Contributed
by Dr. Karen Oberhauser
Life Cycle
Q.
How long do adult Monarchs live?
A. This depends on when they live (summer or winter). It also
varies a lot among individuals (just like it does it humans). In the summer,
adults live from 2 to 6 weeks in captivity, and probably about that long
in the wild. The ones that migrate live longer, from August or September
to about April (although a lot die before this). When people hear this,
they say they'd rather be a migratory monarchs, but these butterflies
probably face many more risks, and are likely to have a smaller chance
of getting offspring into the next generation.
The times
I told you only refer to the adults. It takes them about a month to go
from the egg to adult stage, so we should really add four weeks to those
times. After all, we count human childhood in the human lifespan!
Q.
How many inches are the eggs of a butterfly?
A. They are about the size of a pinhead. How many inches is that?
Q.
How many eggs the monarchs have in one time?
A. They only lay one egg at a time, but they can lay many in a single
day. (The most I've seen is 205 in one day, but this is very unusual.)
Q.
What is the most eggs a monarch has ever laid?
A. I have no way of knowing how many eggs wild females lay. However,
I have studied fecundity (number of eggs laid) by captive females, and
they highest number I've seen was 1179. The average is about 700, but
this varies from year to year. They lay fewer in hot, dry summers.
Q.
Do the butterflies die after they lay their eggs?
A. No, they don't. Adult monarchs live for anywhere from 2 to 6
weeks, and females lay eggs and males mate throughout most of this period.
(Assuming that they aren't in the generation that migrates.) They die
when they get "old," just like people do. In many cases, females
still have eggs in their bodies when they die, so they don't always get
a chance to lay all of their eggs.
Q.
How do they know which plant is a milkweed?
A. They use a combination of visual and chemical cues to find milkweed.
Once they land on a plant, they use sensory organs on their feet and heads
to tell them if it is a milkweed, and probably the quality of the milkweed.
Q.
Can a female monarch have babies without the help of the male?
A. No, a male and female monarch must mate before the female can lay
fertile eggs.
Q. If the female mates and is ready to lay her eggs and
can't locate milkweed plants, what does she do? Does she lay them on any
plant she finds? If that is so, what becomes of the caterpillars?
A. Females will wait a long time to find milkweed. Sometimes in
our cages we keep mated females without milkweed, and VERY rarely, we
will find a few eggs on other plants or the sponges we use to feed the
females. The caterpillars then die. That's a bad situation for females
to be in, and their reproductive cycle is closely coordinated with their
environment so that it doesn't happen too often. We have done studies
here at the University of Minnesota of females that were overwintering
in Mexico. The studies have shown that having milkweed around actually
speeds up egg development.
Q. How long are the caterpillars (larvae)?
A. They grow from being less than 1 centimeter (cm) to about 5 cm.
Q. Can you tell the differance between a male and
female monarch when they are in the larval state?
A. Only if you dissect them and look for the male's testes. In
some butterfly species you can see these testes from the outside, but
not monarchs.
Q.
How do the gold spots on the chrysalis form?
A. We don't know just how they form, or what their function is.
Q. When the newly emerged adult monarch pumps fluid
from the abdomen into the wings, does the fluid remain a liquid in the
veins or do the veins of the wings become solid after awhile?
A. Blood flows through the wings even after the wings have hardened.
Blood flows from the thorax into the wings, and then back into the thorax.
Q.
How does a Monarch Butterfly know how to fly right away when it hatches
out of its chrysalis?
A. Instinct. Unlike humans, insects don't have to learn much. They
are genetically programmed to do things like fly, find food, and migrate
(in the case of monarchs). In some ways, this sounds like a great thing.
However, there isn't as much flexibility in behavior for organisms that
depend on instinct. We need to learn how to talk, walk, read, etc, but
think of the flexibility we have in determining what we do with our life.
Insects don't have that.
Q. Is there any difference between chrysalid and a
chrysalis?
A. No, they're the same thing. Both of them mean the pupa stage of
a butterfly. I've always thought that people said 'chrysalid' because
it's easier to make this word into its plural form ('chrysalids'). I've
never known how to make 'chrysalis' plural, so I usually just say 'pupa'
and 'pupae'! I think you should write a poem about all of these words!
Q.
How is the gold formed in a chrysalis and why?
A. We don't know why. The color itself comes from cardenolides in
the milkweed that larvae eat.
Q.
What happens to all of the butterflies who do not mate? Do they die sooner
or live longer?
A. I've done some experiments studying just this question. I thought
that males that didn't mate might live longer, since they weren't transferring
materials to females in spermatophores. However, there were no differences
in two experimental groups: males that were kept with females and allowed
to mate naturally, and males that were kept in a cage without females.
I have also seen no difference in females. The only monarchs who don't
mate in the wild either die before they have a chance to mate, or never
are successful in finding a mate. We don't think that any monarchs are
in reproductive diapause their entire lives, unless they die before the
end of the winter.
Q.
What percentage of monarchs make it to the migratory stage?
A. Monarchs go through 4 or 5 generations each year, and only one
of these migrates. The migratory generation is the last one of a year,
so it is probably the largest generation, however. It is also probably
the one that has the highest mortality before it reproduces, but we don't
have good data on this.
Q. We understand that the Monarch shuts down the reproductive
cycle before migrating to Mexico. How does this happen?
A. The monarchs that will migrate to Mexico do not mature completely
before they migrate. Even though they look just like normal adults, they
are not sexually mature. They are sort of like a juvenile, or pre-puberty,
person. This happens at some point while they are developing as larvae
and pupae, when they are exposed to shortening days and cooler nights.
Q.
What starts up reproduction again in Mexico, before the butterfly migrates
in the spring?
A. When the butterflies are exposed to lengthening days, and possibly
warmer temperatures, their reproductive organs begin to mature.
Q.
When rearing monarchs, what do you recommend for a cage?
A. I really like the 2x2x2 foot cages that Bioquip sells. Or, you
could make your own cage (check out the directions in our curriculum guide).
We make cages in our lab from plywood and screen that work pretty well,
and the directions for these are in our guide. You just need to be a little
handy with a staple gun, sewing machine, and screw driver!
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