The 1,000-Mile Great Lakes Adventures

Showing posts with label monarch butterfly. Show all posts
Showing posts with label monarch butterfly. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 1, 2014

Monarch butterflies

Monarch butterflies are finally 
having a good year. 
Conditions this spring were favorable as the cloud of monarchs migrated north from their wintering grounds in Mexico into southern U.S. 
The summer was also easy on the butterflies as the next generations migrated into the northern states. Many thousands of them make their way into the Great Lakes basin.
MonarchWatch.org collects data and also sells milkweed plugs so concerned monarch fans can cultivate this important plant on their land.

Milkweed is the ONLY plant that monarchs will lay eggs on. It is the ONLY plant that the caterpillars of the monarchs will eat.

While hiking on Manitoulin Island, I saw the most beautiful milkweed plants: 


The amount of milkweed growing along the migratory path of the monarchs has been declining for years and has caused a huge drop in the number of monarchs.
Learn more HERE.

Saturday, September 29, 2012

Somebody's Watching Me


While hiking on the remote island of North Manitou, I had a feeling I was being watched.
So...
I looked over my shoulder...



And saw this praying mantis riding ON my shoulder.


Hello...





I dropped him off on a tree and continued my hike.

Insect life abounds at the lake edge. 
Here are a few more photos of butterflies I encountered along the way.




Saturday, July 7, 2012

Milkweed Along the Lakeshore

Milkweed budding out

One benefit of hiking over a long period is that I have observed the progression of spring to summer with each step.  

One of the intriguing plants that grows along the edges of our Great Lakes is milkweed.  

It is rather unassuming as it pushes its leaves up and out of the sandy soil, but then buds form and finally burst into a globe of little five-pointed flowers.  

Many insects are drawn to milkweed, and some of them will fall prey to this hungry spider.


When they finally come into full bloom, the flowers give off a sweet and lively scent, drawing all sorts of creatures to the plant for life-giving nectar.  

The life cycle of the monarch butterfly is tied to milkweed.  The eggs they lay there hatch into caterpillars and these caterpillars feed exclusively on the milkweed leaves.  The "milk" of the plant is acidic and toxic to many creatures.  By feasting on the milkweed, the caterpillar and the butterfly it transforms into do not taste very good.  Most predators will avoid eating the monarch because of this.  

Blooming


Friday, July 6, 2012

Bugs along the Lakeshore

Enjoy these photos of bugs along 
the lakeshore:



Sunlight through a Dragonfly wing


Monarch 


Swallowtail butterfly


Mayflies in Alpena


Millipede near Lake Huron


Moth at 40-mile Point Lighthouse


Good hunting for spiders along the lakeshore


Gorgeous moth near Cheboygan


Dragonfly resting among the needles


Dragonfly in grasses along the lakeshore


Wednesday, January 27, 2010

The Lake in All Seasons


I began my Lake Trek on March 16, 2009, and finished on September 26, 2009. I began at the tail end of winter when there was still ice on the lake, and finished in the first days of the following fall as the first leaves were falling.



The lake changes with the seasons.

I saw it rage during a spring storm, and, in the final days of summer there was a day when it was inert without so much as a whisper of movement against the shore.

The animals and insects and plants changed as I walked the lake. They shed their winter coats, transformed from caterpillar to butterfly, and completed the eternal cycle of plant-flower-seed-death.

One connection of these cycles that was present on just about every segment of my adventure was the milkweed-monarch cycle. The empty pods from last year were at the beginning of my journey. Then, the new plants emerged and were feasted on by the monarch caterpillars as they struggled to produce their intricate blooms.









As the caterpillars bulked up for the change into creatures of flight, the milkweed dropped its flowers and set about, once again, making seeds to release in the fall and winter winds.