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Showing posts with label butterflies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label butterflies. Show all posts

Friday, October 29, 2010

They are back


Last year October 26 2009,  the Orion butterfly appeared in my garden. Today they are back! The Orion (historis odius) is the largest butterfly in the Caribbean area, a strong and high flier, they are found between Florida, Mexico  and the Caribbean as far as Belize and South America. They feed on rotting fruit and their larval food is the Cecropia tree. I have documented the life cycle of this butterfly  here .
Wishing all gardeners around the globe a wonderful and fruitful weekend.

Monday, October 26, 2009

The Orion (historis odius)

Good news! I was using the new editor in blogger and that wasn't working, so I went back to the old editor and am back in action. As they say new brooms sweep clean...but old ones know the corners.
The Orion butterfly caterpillar (historis odius)
A few weeks ago my husband spotted an Orion butterfly near the house and mentioned it to me. I replied that they must be laying their eggs on the Cercropia trees I had planted for that purpose hoping one day that would happen. So I quickly ran into the garden and looked up in the tree. Ha there were these little caterpillars munching away on the leaves. We had never seen the caterpillars before, so to make sure these were the Orion caterpillars, we clipped a leaf and placed it in a container for observation.

Like most butterfly caterpillars they tend to take on the colouring of their immediate surroundings for protection against predators.
I was rather surprised when this caterpillar turned a bright yellow, hubby thought that something was wrong.
It was getting ready to go into the chrysalis stage.
This is when it goes into the J shape and hangs. It will remain like this for 24 hrs.
The next day the chrysalis was formed. It looked like a dried leaf or a piece of twig.

The chrysalis hung there for 8 days and on the 9th day it darkened. This is usually a sign that the butterfly will soon be born. You can actually see the wings through the casing.
The next day around 9.00 am we became the proud parents of a newly born Orion !
I found this one in my garden under the cordyline leaf.
Orion butterflies feed on rotted fruit, they are also nicknamed stinky wings. To attract them we placed old bananas , plantain, carambola and guava outside on a table.
As if by magic one soon appeared. I was elated. Notice the proboscis taking up all the sweet juices from the fruit.
I thought I had seen two butterflies in the area but wasn't sure if it were the same one. So I told my husband that there might be two butterflies. He said that he wasn't believing anything until he had seen it himself and that he had read somewhere that these butterflies were not sociable creatures. He probably though that I was hallucinating but I knew deep down that there were two I had seen.
A while later I heard a shout from my doubting hubby to come quickly! I ran with my camera in hand and ha ha ha....there were two butterflies feeding. I wasn't seeing doubles after all!
Cercropia peltata the larval food for the Orion (historis odius) These are beautiful trees found growing in gullies and hillsides.

It is very difficult to get a shot of the Orion with their wings open. This is one of the few I have managed to take so far .
I've got the whole world
in my hands
I've go the O----RION
in my hands
I've got the whole world
in my hands
I've got the O-----RION
in my hands

The Orion ranges from Cuba to the Greater and Lesser Antilles, Mexico to Argentina. Its wing span is 110 - 130 mm or 4½ to 5½ inches. Larval food is Cercropia peltata trees, also known as Bois canoe in creole. The Orion is a large butterfly with velvety dark brown and orange on the upper wings and dark brown with white bars on the underneath. When closed the wings resemble a dry leaf or a piece of bark, which allows the Orion to blend in with its surroundings without being seen. It feeds on rotting fruit and is a high flier.

Saturday, September 6, 2008

The Butterflies of Barbados

Barbados has very few Butterflies due to its location in the Atlantic. My hubby has a special interest in butterflies (lepidoptera) and has documented the local ones. We have also assisted the philatelic bureau at the Barbados Post Office with some of their commemorative stamps featuring the Butterflies of Barbados a few years ago.
Female Mimic with wings closed. This butterfly is a seasonal visitor and the larval food is purslane a wild type of portulaca weed . It is said that the mimic is an old world butterfly from the African continent and came to the Caribbean via storms/hurricanes and perhaps the slave ships.
male and female mimic feeding with monarch
The female Mimic (hypolimnas misippus), notice how similar in colour it is to the monarch the butterfly. The Monarch has very few predators and this butterfly mimics it for protection... hence the name mimic. The male looks nothing like the female it is dark brown with white spots with a purple edge on the wings.
The Gulf Fritillary (agraulis vanillae) its larva feeds on passiflora
The Orion (historis odius) resembles an old leaf to fool predators, the butterfly feeds on rotting fruit and its larval food is the Cecropia and also known as bois canoe in the islands.
The Peacock ( anartia jatropae) tends to habitat swampy areas and the larval food is water Hyssops (bacopa caroliniana)
This is the caterpillar of the monarch butterfly. It starts out as a tiny egg under the leaf of the milkweed. It is an eating machine that only feeds on milkweed (asclepsias curassavica). The bigger the caterpillar the larger the butterfly. The milkweed is a poisonous plant and since the caterpillar feeds on it, it becomes poisonous to predators. If the milkweed runs out the caterpillar will go in search of milkweeds. If it cannot find it it will pupate if it is big enough or die. They will find a sheltered spot under a leaf, roof or any receptacle to pupate. The caterpillar will go into a " J " position and hang from the top and then quickly spin into a beautiful green cocoon or chrysalis.
There is a tiny band of gold on the top of the chrysalis and many times I am still in awe of this magnificent transformation of mother nature. It is a remarkable sight when viewing the transformation from caterpillar to chrysalis.
After five days or so the chrysalis becomes transparent and the butterfly becomes visible through the casing. The butterfly is ready to enter the world. They come out early morning so that their wings can dry and in a few hours they are feeding on nectar and looking for a mate to start the cycle all over again.


The Monarch (danaus plexippus) is probably the most popular and talked about butterfly in the world. It is found in many parts of North and South America. In north America they migrate to the warmer climate of Mexico to spend the winter months. There they breed and die, their offspring will migrate back to the land of their parents in spring and will start the journey again in fall to Mexico like their parents.
In Barbados, and warmer climates the monarch is an all year resident since there is no need for them to migrate. They are found in colonies where their larval plant milkweed (asclepsias curassavica) grows. However due to the indiscriminate use of pesticides and herbicides, the development of land for agriculture and housing has left the monarch in a precarious position. The larval food milkweed is no longer available when the land is cleared and the monarch has to find new habitats. Many of these habitats have already been destroyed and it is becoming very difficult for the monarch to survive in the Caribbean. We have tried in the past to start a project in schools to help children set up butterfly gardens at the schools and at home and was met with very vigorous opposition with some people in the Education Ministry. That was about 12 years ago, perhaps the timing was wrong and now is the time to try again. I think I will try again since new people are there and the thinking is more environmentally friendly.
Little sulphur (eurema lisa) one of the yellows we have, its larval food is mimosa
Other butterflies present are the orange barred Sulphur, Hanno's blue a tiny butterfly, and the not often seen Polydamas Swallowtail.