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Is
Nectar Important in the Monarch's
Overwintering Habitat?
Scientists
Don’t Always Agree
"As
far as I'm concerned, the question about whether nectaring is important
is unresolved at this time," says Dr. Calvert. "Brower's
study suggests that butterflies are wasting their time nectaring,
and I have a little trouble with the notion of creatures wasting their
time in nature."
He agrees
that there are too many butterflies for local plants to supply sufficient
nectar.
"However,"
Dr. Calvert says, "we don't know much about what they do if they
survive until, say, the beginning of March. It may be that the ones
that are starving are just driven out of the colony and they find nectar
on the routes to the north.
"That's
a real possibility. We haven't really measured. We haven't looked at
butterflies to the north of the overwintering areas. Indeed they are
almost impossible to catch and measure."
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