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Butterfly Breathe

Butterflies are one of the most sensitive barometers of the
entire environment! Their presence around our homes and gardens
indicates a vital, healthy ecosystem; their absence indicates
a serious decline in that ecosystems overall health.
Butterfly Breathe
All
insects are aerobic organisms, meaning just like us, they
need air to survive. Insects, like butterflies, take in air
through tiny holes that run along their exoskeleton (outer
skeleton), called spiracles. These tiny holes run along the
butterflies thorax and abdomen. If a butterfly lives in an
area with air pollution, the pollution will go straight into
the butterfly's body.
Butterflies and Ozone
Monarch butterfly larvae feed
on milkweed exclusively. This means that they only eat the
milkweed plant, which would be like you only eating lettuce
for every meal and snack! Unfortunately for the monarch, we
produce an air pollutant called ozone, that is killing the
milkweed. This leaves the caterpillar with nothing to eat!
Ozone,
the air pollutant sounds really bad, but what people often
don't realize is that there are two different kinds of ozone.
The bad ozone, that kills the milkweed and can make us ill,
is found close to the ground where all of the plants and animals
can breathe it is. The other ozone is found way up high in
the atmosphere. This ozone is far to high up in the sky for
us to breathe and so does not cause us any health problems,
in fact it protects our skin from the harmful rays from the
sun. So if you hear about a hole in the ozone layer, they
are talking about the ozone high up in the atmosphere that
protects us from the sun.
Plant
a Butterfly Garden
Butterflies like
to land on certain flowers to gather nectar for food. The
plants and flowers that they need cannot grow in certain places
because the air is too dirty. You can plant a butterfly garden
to encourage butterflies to your neighborhood, but remember
to ask for permission first.
You'll
need: flowers like purple coneflowers, black-eyed susans,
marigolds, lilacs, goldenrod, hibiscus, day lilies, and other
brightly colored flowers.
Directions:
(1) Pick a large open space to plant these flowers as many
of them are big;
(2) Make sure that
the space you pick gets plenty of sunlight- most of
these flowers require 6-8 hours of sunlight a day;
(3) Plant the tall
flowers in the back and the smaller flowers in the front;
(4) water them
often and watch for butterflies.
Pesticides:
Please don't use pesticides in your garden as these can kill
butterflies and caterpillars. Careful use of insecticidal
soaps is safer, though these can still kill caterpillars.
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