Humbolt Jr. High School
St. Paul, MN
Abstract
In this experiment we tested to see if putting chrysalises in different
temperatures affects the size of the adult butterfly. We put
chrysalises in the refrigerator, the greenhouse and our classroom
until they emerged into adults. We found that the chrysalises that
developed in the greenhouse were the largest butterflies and the
ones that developed in the refrigerator never emerged. The experiment
would have been more accurate if the same person took all the measurements
and if we started with eggs instead of chrysalises. We learned that
chrysalises don't emerge in very cool temperatures and we learned
that the warmer the temperature, the faster the chrysalis develops.
Problem
How does the temperature affect the size of the adult
monarch butterfly (during chrysalis development)?
Hypothesis
I think the larvae will get bigger in the heat.
Justification
I think they will get bigger in the heat because the
heat will speed them up and make them grow larger.
Materials
- cups
- 3 boxes
- string
- rulers
- sticks
- 3 cloth covers
- thermometer
- fridge
- greenhouse/heat lamps
- chrysalises
- pencils
- balance
- data recording sheet
Method
- Gather 18 chrysalises
- Measure chrysalises with a string. Wrap string
around chrysalis and mark it, then measure the mark on the string
with a ruler.
- Record age of the chrysalis and date.
- Make cages and gather a popsicle stick, string,
and paper cup.
- Make containers
- Tie chrysalis to the string, then attach the string
to the popsicle stick and stick to the cup.
- Place chrysalises in 3 different boxes covered
with black plastic.
- Store these boxes at 3 different temperatures:
room, fridge, and greenhouse.
Daily Upkeep
Make observations and take temperatures for two weeks.
Record this in the data table.
Once They Emerge
Measure wing span.
Results
The temperature in the greenhouse (hot) was 27 °C.
The average wingspan for the hot temperature was 4.5 cm. The
room temperature was 21 °C and the average wingspan in this temperature
was 4.1 cm. The average chrysalis size in hot was 2.5 cm,
while the average chrysalis size for room temp was 3 cm. The
refrigerator temperature was 16 °C and we found that no butterflies
emerged from these chrysalises.

Analysis
From the results I can see that the wing span of the
monarch butterflies in the hot are larger than the ones in room
temperature. The size of the chrysalis in the hot is smaller
than those in room temperature, however. It is strange that
in the hot they have smaller chrysalises, yet their wing spans are
larger than those in room temperature.
*Some of the chrysalises kept in the hot temperature
were weird, they were brown. The cold ones did not emerge.
*If I were to repeat this experiment, I would do more
chrysalises and have their exact ages.
Conclusion
I wanted to see if the temperature would affect the
size of monarch butterflies. The wingspans of the butterflies
that emerged from chrysalises kept in the hot temperature were larger
than those from chrysalises kept in room temperature. Yes,
my results support my hypothesis. Two additional things that
I learned from this experiment were how to care for larvae and how
to measure them.
1998
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