The Painted Lady—A Mystery Revealed
EUROPEAN observers
have long admired colorful painted lady butterflies (Vanessa cardui) and have wondered what happened to them at
the end of each summer. Do they simply perish with the onset of cold weather?
Fresh research reveals an extraordinary story. The butterflies make an annual
journey between northern Europe and Africa.
Researchers combined results from sophisticated radar with thousands of
sightings reported by volunteers across Europe. The results revealed that as
the summer ends, millions of painted lady butterflies migrate south, mostly
flying at an altitude of more than 1,600 feet (500 m)—therefore
hardly ever seen by humans. The butterflies wait for favorable winds, which
they ride at an average speed of 28 miles per hour (45 km/h) on the
long trip to Africa. Their annual migration is up to 9,300 miles
(15,000 km) long, beginning from as far north as the fringes of the Arctic
and terminating as far south as tropical West Africa. The trip is almost double
that of the North American monarch butterfly. It takes six successive
generations of painted ladies to complete the round-trip.
Professor Jane Hill of the University of York, in England,
explains: “The Painted Lady just keeps going, breeding and moving.” Annually,
those steps take the whole population from northern Europe to Africa and back
again.
“This tiny creature weighing less than a gram
[0.04 oz] with a brain the size of a pin head and no opportunity to learn
from older, experienced individuals, undertakes an epic intercontinental
migration,” states Richard Fox, surveys manager at Butterfly Conservation. This
insect was “once thought to be blindly led, at the mercy of the wind, into an
evolutionary dead end in the lethal British winter,” Fox adds. Yet this study
“has shown Painted Ladies to be sophisticated travellers.”
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