It has been the Maryland state insect since 1973. Its scientific name is Euphydryas phaeton. It has been declining since the 90’s in the Mid Atlantic.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Wings of spring Float 22 By malik and jonas. Butterfly Stages A butterfly has four stages egg, larva, pupa, and adult. A butterfly has four stages egg,
Advertisements

Monarch Butterflies.
Insects and Creepy Crawlers
BALTIMORE CHECKERSPOT BUTTERFLY RESTORATION PROJECT BY: LILY LE 2/22/12 SCIENCE.
Bug and Insect Quiz!! By Lexy.
The Checkerspot butterfly Named the official Maryland State insect in 1973 Their family and subfamily is Nymphalinae Their Eggs are laid in groups of.
The Case of the Missing Caterpillar
By: Caroline Ms. Weinberg
ButterfliesButterflies Butterfly Life Cycle Click too see butterfly life cycle!!!!!!!!!!! The first stage is the egg. The second stage is the larva.
Click the mouse to see the steps of the butterfly lifecycle.
MEALWORMS WILD HABITAT Mealworms live where they are surrounded by what they eat - under rocks, logs, animal burrows and in stored grains.
Mute Swan By Claire Swanson. The reproduction of mute swans The reproduction of mute swans The mating of mute swans is started in March and April That.
The Life Cycle of a Butterfly
Complete and Incomplete Metamorphosis
1. Monarch butterflies facts Monarch butterflies are the most beautiful of all butterflies, some say, and are considered the “king” of the butterflies,
LIFE CYCLE OF A BUTTERFLY
Chapter 2 Section 3.
Ecosystems and Adaptations Test Review
Habitats and Food Chains
Interactions of Living Things
Insect Metamorphosis. INCOMPLETE Metamorphosis Has THREE stages COMPLETE Metamorphosis Has FOUR stages.
Environmental Science Chapter 4: The Organization of Life
Ecosystems What is ecology?.
Interactions of Living Things
There are many different species of Butterflies and Moths that make up the very large insect order of “LEPIDOPTERA”
How is a clown fish living? By Chelsey. Energy  Living things require energy to live, the clown fish obtains it’s energy from eating plankton and barnacles.
Living Things and the Environment
THIS IS With Host... Your Vocab. words Food WebsEcosystem s Misc.Plants Food Chains 100.
Katie Santorelli 1st Grade, Science
Interactions Within Ecosystems
Organisms, the Environment, and Human Impact
© 2009 Marshall Cavendish International (Singapore) Private Limited.
INSECTS ARE EVERYWHERE!
Habitats and Food Chains Make a list of living and non-living items that you encounter in the world.
Environmental Interdependence
Biology 4 th MP Quarterly Exam Study Guide. Genetic drift: change in allele frequency due to chance Bottleneck Effect: genetic drift after a bottleneck.
Interactions of Living Things
Habitats and Food Chains. What is an ecosystem? An ecosystem refers to all the animals and plants found in one place, and the way they all live together.
The Life Cycle of a Butterfly Ms. Drake’s 3 rd Grade Class.
Wild in Pennsylvania Monarch Butterfly
Monarch Butterfly By: Kayla Reed. Characteristics The Monarch Butterfly is an insect. And it is cold blooded. They also have orange and black wings. And.
The Lifecycle of a Butterfly By: Christina Jordan June 20, 2006.
By: Elizabeth Bobbitt. INTRODUCTION: WHAT HAS COLORFUL SCALY WINGs AND IS AN INSECT ? A BUTTERFLY ! 1.
Peacock b y K h al i d. description  The male peafowl is called the peacock. He is about 84 inches long. The female is called peahen and is about 34.
Marvelous Monarchs By: Wendy Briles Elisabel Reyes Shimona Eason.
Saguaro National Park By: Xuan Li, Mara Yella, and Dorie Levine.
Bald Eagle Bird of Prey By: WK.
Symbiosis, Competition, Predator/Prey. Because, in order to survive, a living organism depends on other living things. Why Do Living Things Interact With.
The Life Cycle of a Monarch Butterfly By: Alexandria Gonzalez.
Learning About Butterflies  An insect  Has wings that it uses to fly  Similar to a moth but not the same What is a butterfly?
Limiting Factors in an Ecosystem
Ecosystems and Food Chains. What is an ecosystem? An ecosystem refers to all the animals and plants found in one place, and the way they all live together.
African cattle birds often ride on the backs of African cattle, eating ticks off the cattle’s backs. What kind of relationship is this? A. mutualism B.
Attracting Attracting Butterflies To A Garden. Butterflies have four main stages during their life cycle. It is important to create a garden that is attractive.
Mini Beasts Exploring the bugs in our environment.
Interactions of Living Things. The environment consists of: Biotic Factors (living things) – Plants – Animals – Bacteria, fungi, protists Abiotic Factors.
Energy Pyramids Energy Pyramids show the loss of energy at each feeding level in a food chain Only 10% of energy is passed onto the next level in a food.
Honey Bees By Parker Johnson. Where Bees Live/ Ability to Adapt The honey bees is a very widespread insect Sadly it is endangered Humans are the main.
Unit 8: Populations and Communities. I. Organisms and the Environment a.An organism gets food, water, shelter from their environment as well as other.
Life cycle of a Butterfly Katelyn Baird Stage One Tiny eggs are laid by the female on a leaf. Female lays between eggs. Most eggs wont survive.
Chapter 18 Interactions of Living Things. Section 18.1 Living vs. Nonliving.
Ecology 2.
Ecology 2.
Ecology Media Presentation
Life Cycle Presentation By: Lauren Robinson. Life Cycle of the Butterfly.
Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?
True or false? 1. An ecosystem is all the animals that live together in a given area. 2. A layer of decayed leaves that covers the soil in a forest is.
Competition and Limiting Factors Review
Ecology 2.
Presentation transcript:

It has been the Maryland state insect since Its scientific name is Euphydryas phaeton. It has been declining since the 90’s in the Mid Atlantic and Maryland. It used to be in 15 counties in Maryland, now it’s only in five. It’s on Maryland’s “Watch list” even though it’s not officially endangered. Its habitat is a wet meadow. It needs to have white turtlehead, a required larval food. It needs to have sun and be open, with maybe grazing animals or occasional mowing. Its eggs are laid in groups of at least 100 to at most 700 eggs under host plant (white turtlehead) leaves. Males perch low to the ground to attract females. When the caterpillars are newly hatched they feed on the tip of the milkweed and are at risk from falling off and parasitism by wasps that are a biotic part of their habitat. They have one brood per year. These butterflies fly in from June to mid July. The checkerspot butterfly has mostly black wings with white and gold details. Its wingspan is 1 3/ /4 inches ( cm). Some behavioral adaptations are that it started to eat other plants than just white turtlehead and it learned to live in meadows as apposed to just wetlands. Some structural adaptations are the big spots on their wings that look like eyes that scare away predators and their bright colors that make them look poisonous. (They are poisonous to birds.) The adults eat nectar from milkweed, viburnum, and wild rose. The butterflies mate in February to May.

The adult butterflies emerge in spring. The male checkerspot typically emerges four to eight days before the female. The males have one goal, and that goal is reproduction. They find and mate with a female immediately. The male mates many times while most females mate once during the flight season. The adults also look for nectar. Female lay several hundred eggs on the base of varied plants. This happens in the spring, mostly April and March. They take about ten days to hatch. Once hatched, they climb on the turtlehead and spin a web around the leaves. They eat together. Turtlehead is the only plant that the larvae eat. They shed their skin a number of times and then hide under rocks or soil in a diapause, which is a delay in development. After this ends, they can resume eating and developing into full grown butterflies.

Declining reasons Crop agriculture taken the place of their habitats Changing habitats due to global warming Over-consumtion of the white turtlehead by the growing population of white tailed deer. Insecticide on plants Insecticide put out to kill Gypsy moths, but had a bad effect on the Butterflies Herbicide

Worst Case Scenario The worst case scenario would be if the chance parasitism of the larvae by the wasps grew, and if their much relied on host plant was gone because of over-consumption. Also, if people continue to use toxic pesticides and herbicides. If somehow, the butterflies are not able to adapt to the climate change they will die off. This is why we need to start helping the butterflies right away.

FOOD WEB predator- cottontail rabbit. Second level consumer Predator- white tailed deer. Second level consumer Predator- oriole. Second level consumer Prey-white turtlehead. Producer Prey- milkweed. Producer Checkerspot Butterfly. First level consumer.

Habitat = Brookside Gardens Nature Center Brookside Gardens is Montgomery County’s 50-acre public display garden with distinct habitat areas including ones to support Checkerspot butterflies. They have deer exclusion gates in place. In contrast, the places where the butterflies are struggling, there are changes that need to be made, such as how people use herbicides, pesticides and don’t have fences to keep deer away. Brookside Gardens would be an ideal location to reintroduce the Checkerspot Buttterfly. Checkerspots need a protected home with a fence so the deer don’t come and eat all their food. Toxic herbicides and pesticides will not be used here and those are a big, big part of why the Checkerspot’s number is declining. These butterflies do have predators and competition so there is not a risk of overpopulation. The reintroduction of the butterfly will not damage the habitat because they eat a limited number of types of food, and they have a healthy balance of competition for their food. The checkerspot’s biotic factors needed for survival in the habitat are grass, white turtlehead, milkweed, predators, wasps and other Checkerspot butterflies. The abiotic factors needed are a fence, sunlight, water, soil and oxygen.

Sun- abiotic Water- abiotic Rabbit- biotic Milkweed -biotic White turtlehead- biotic Checkerspot butterflies- biotic Fence-abiotic Deer- biotic Oriole- biotic Oxygen -abiotic Grass- biotic Wasps- biotic

ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT The environmental impact of reintroduction of the checkerspot butterfly is simple. Overproduction will not be a problem because there is predators that eat the butterfly. There will be competition for the Checkerspot’s main food source, the white turtlehead. That will be maintained because there will be fences to keep away the deer, and because of the large spots on the wings of the butterflies that have been adapted over time. These resemble eyes and scare away some predators. The habitats change due to people and global warming, and it is not easy for the butterflies to get used to the changing habitats, but like all organisms, they will adapt to the changing habitats and environment over time. And if we use Brookside Gardens as the location to reintroduce them, it will lead to more protection and support of the Checkerspots because it is an education garden which teaches visitors how to make the habitat at their homes.

How will this plan help the butterflies? This plan is going to help the butterflies by giving them a protected space with all their needs fulfilled. There is a balance between predators and prey, and a balance between abiotic and biotic factors in the habitat. There is a much needed fence to keep away the deer that eat most of the white turtlehead. Having them away will help the butterflies thrive a lot more because the deer is a big reason why their population is decreasing. This plan will give the butterflies time to reproduce and go back to the numbers that they used to be. And if we use Brookside Gardens as the location to reintroduce them, it will lead to more protection and support of the Checkerspots because it is an education garden which teaches visitors how to make the habitat at their homes.