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Stephanie Warren
McGuire Jr. High School
Lakeville, MN
Abstract
I wanted to find out if butterflies live better in
warm or room temperatures. I
took two fifth instar caterpillars and put them in buckets; one on a
heat rock and the other in a room with normal temperature. The
butterfly emerging from warm temperature was bigger and healthier. Then
we took two caterpillars and put one in a room temperature, and the other
in warm temperature. The butterfly emerging from room temperature
was smaller and less healthy than the warm temperature butterfly. I
think that if I tested more butterflies my results would be more accurate.
Purpose
The purpose of this experiment was to find out
if temperature affects the growth of the pupae and the effects that it
has on the butterfly after emerging.
Hypothesis
The butterfly emerging from the room temperature
pupa will be slightly smaller than the butterfly emerging from the warm
temperature pupa. I think this because from my research I found that
the monarch, like feathered flocks, fly southward to escape the killing
frosts of winter. From my research I also found that in the winter months,
the monarchs vanish from the colder regions and travel great distances
to Texas, Florida, and other warm regions. Finding this out, I
realized that birds go south for the winter to stay warm and figured
that that must be the reason that the monarchs also go. Because
of my research, I think that the butterflies emerging from pupae kept
in warm temperatures will be larger and healthier than those from pupae
kept in room temperature.
Background
Information
Some information that I found was very interesting. Monarchs
can travel great distances for migration and the reproductive cycle.
The butterfly skims and flies from Texas to New England, from Florida
to Minnesota. In the winter, the monarch butterfly vanishes from the
colder regions. Do you know where it goes? The monarchs crowd by the
millions in central Mexico to spend the midwinter months in semidormancy.
Monarch migration is very interesting and baffles many people. Some monarchs
flying south in the fall return to their summer breeding grounds, although
none survive longer than a year. Unlike many other insects in temperate
climates, monarch butterflies cannot survive a long, cold winter. Instead,
they spend the cold winters in warm climates such as Mexico and Florida.
If they linger too long they wont be able to make the journey because
they are cold-blooded and are unable to fly in cold weather. The fat
that they store in the abdomen is a critical element of their survival
for the long cold winters. In October to November, when the weather starts
to get cold, the monarchs start their journey to thirteen roosting sites
west of Mexico City, Mexico. The butterflies hang out there for the winter
and in the spring they will find a partner and mate. It is a continuous
cycle affected by the weather. To sum this all up, the monarch butterfly
cannot live a healthy life in cold climates. They live longer and healthier
in the warmer climates.
Materials
- two fifth instar caterpillars
- two clear, plastic boxes
- one heat rock
- one room temperature place
- two thermometers
- juice
- paper towels
- sponges
- milkweed
Controls
One control in my experiment is the identical
amounts of milkweed and juice given to each specimen. We also did not
change the position of the pupae during the experiment.
Variables
The dependent variable in my experiment is how
the butterfly acts and looks like after pupating in different temperatures.
The independent variable in my experiment is the hot and room temperatures
that they will be growing in.
Procedure
- Find two clear buckets
- Find two fifth instar caterpillars
- Wet a paper towels and put them in the bottom of the buckets
- Put 2.5 milkweed leaves in each buckets
- Put one caterpillar in each bucket
- Put a thermometer into each of the buckets
- Put one of the buckets on a heat rock
- Put the other bucket on the floor in the corner of the room
- Check buckets everyday for pupation and progress
- Put fresh paper towels in the buckets everyday
- Put 2.5 milkweed leaves in the buckets each day until pupation
- After they have emerged, feed the butterflies juice
- Record the deaths and actions of the caterpillars and butterflies
Conclusion
The warm temperature pupa resulted in a larger and
healthier butterfly in the end. If I were to do this again, I would
change the number of
pupae that I tested and I might put a couple pupae in the refrigerator.
The pupa in the room temperature was fairly smaller than the pupa in
the warm temperature. The butterfly from the room temperature pupa had
a hard time eating the juice and I often found myself having to force
its probiscus out of its mouth. I didnt really have many problems
with my experiment. I was very lucky in that area. I think that a caterpiller,
pupa, or butterfly can live well in warm or room temperature. I would
suggest, though, that if you would like a big and healthy butterfly in
the end, to raise them in warmer temperatures over any other.
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