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MARVELLOUS JOURNEY.

BUTTERFLIES’ GREAT TREK. TROPICS TO THE ARCTIC. MYSTERY OF MIGRATION. Ships passing along the English Channel in the spring often see swarms of butterflies crossing the sea from France to England. These butterflies are known as “painted ladies,” and they go to England every year from the'south, though in varying numbers. Sometimes hundreds of thousands of them cross the Channel, and in other years only a few, but were it not for these visitors from abroad England would have no painted lady butterflies at all, for, although on arrival they lay eggs and caterpillars hatch out, and they in turn change into butterflies, these all die off when winter comes, aud the country i s left with none to carry ■on tile race. Some wonderful information about these ‘‘painted ladies” recently came to light as a result of the investigations of scientists. Mr. C. B. Williams, the Chief Entomologist to th e . Egyptian Ministry of Agriculture, teil s the story. Their place of origin-, it -seems, i s south of the great desert belt that crosses Africa and Western Asia. FROM AFRICA TO ICELAND.

“Painted ladies” have been seen in large numbers entering Algeria from the south, crossing the Nile Valiev near Cairo, and entering Palestine from the East for days on end. They have been seen massed m great numbers, apparently resting; dur. ing migration, in the Egyptian desert near the Sudan border. Farther south they have not been recorded, and it is therefore assumed that their breeding places must be just south of the long border lin e stretching across North Africa and Asia Minor. In the eary spring the butterflies from Africa begin to move north, and they arrive at the couthern . shores of the" Mediterranean about April. From Palestine masses of “painted ladies” fly through Syria and Turkey to the Balkan States, ’ and those which have arrived in Egypt and Tripoli and Algeria fly across the Mediterranean to Southern Europe, which they reach early in May. Thence the butterflies pas s on, probably leaving stragglers behind all the time, until at last they cross the English Channel and land on the southern shores of England at the end of May. But their great trek is not over yet. They continue their journey, flying to the north of’ Scotland, where they arrive about mid-June, and some still go on until they reach Iceland, their northern limit, in July.

IN THE TEETH OF THE WIND. It is an amazing journey for such frail creatures, liable, one would think, to be driven about by every wind and storm. Yet they do not fly with the wind, but in its teeth. From their breeding grounds in Africa to liceland is about 4000 miles, and this great trek of the “painted ladies” across half a hemisphere is one of the greatest marvels of migration known to science. In some years countless million,; of them arrive in Western Europe from the south. How do they know their way ? There is no evidence that any of the butterflies ever go back again. They have never been seen travelling in a reverse direction, yet- it is so amazing that fresh broods should year after year be born in Africa and always find their way to the same countries in the north that some scientists think number.* of them must return, ft- is suggested that they either go back in swarms at night or fly back alone as individuals, thus escaping notice. But of this there is no evidence, and it seems unlikely that if they return they should not at some time or other have been seen, doing so. LAYING OF THE EGGS.

This migration of the butterflies is simething quite different from that of the birds, for whereas the birds lay their eggs either in the place they come from or the place they go to, the “painted* ladies” lay their eggs throughout the whole range of their migration. In fact, so marvellous is the long flight from the deserts to the north that- Mr. Williams suggests that the butterflies which begin the flight aree not the sarile as those that reach the more northerly areas, but that on the way they lay eggs which hatch out as caterpillars and become butter flies, and that' these in turn move north. According to this. the.eye the migration is in’ fact a kind of relay race, different sets .of butterflies faking up the journey where llicur predecessors left off. It is an ini cresting theory, but makes the migr it-.cn still more of a mystery. Such a wonderful discoverv will no doubt be rdilmved up, and there wiL be further investigations, which may lead to more amazing disclosures about this beautiful butterfly.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HAWST19250711.2.13

Bibliographic details

Hawera Star, Volume XLV, 11 July 1925, Page 3

Word Count
789

MARVELLOUS JOURNEY. Hawera Star, Volume XLV, 11 July 1925, Page 3

MARVELLOUS JOURNEY. Hawera Star, Volume XLV, 11 July 1925, Page 3