Humbolt Jr. High School
St. Paul, MN
Abstract
In our experiment we tested to see if monarchs had
a preference for natural flower colors (those they see in nature)
or unnatural colors. We used pink as our natural color and
brown as our unnatural color. We put each butterfly in a cage
with 2 flowers, one of each color, and observed its behavior.
In 4 out of 5 trials, the butterfly chose the more natural pink
over the brown. Due to our small sample size though, we are
unsure if this is an actual preference or just a coincidence.
Problem
What do monarchs prefer, natural (pink) or unnatural
(brown) flower colors?
Hypothesis
The monarch butterflies will prefer the natural colored
flowers over the unnatural colored flowers.
Justification
In the wild, monarchs only see natural colored flowers,
so I think they will rely on natural instinct.
Method
- Put honey on carnations and dye one pink and one
brown.
- Place flowers in a shoebox cage
- Place one butterfly in a cage, between the two
flowers
- Observe and record the butterfly's color choice
and behavior
- Repeat with new, hungry butterflies
Results
Four out of five butterflies chose the natural color
(pink) over the unnatural color (brown).
| Butterfly
Gender |
Color
Choice |
Time
to Choose (min) |
Time
it ate (min) |
M |
pink
and brown |
1 |
3
(pink)
1.5 (brown) |
F |
pink |
3 |
0.5 |
F |
pink |
0.1 |
1 |
F |
pink |
0.5 |
2 |
M |
pink |
0.3 |
2 |
Conclusion
We wanted to find out if monarchs had an instinct
that attracted them to natural flower colors. The monarchs
chose the natural color pink over the unnatural brown 4 out of 5
times. However, this is a small sample size, so some of this
results may have been coincidence. Other students did not
get the same results. We learned that monarchs rely on instinct
and that they can eat for 3 minutes straight!
Next Time
If we were to repeat this experiment, we would use
a larger cage with lots of monarchs and many different colors of
natural and unnatural flowers.
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