Judy Falvey
McGuire Jr. High School
Lakeville, MN
Purpose
The purpose of this experiment is to find out if heat and cold affects
pupae emerging into monarchs.
Hypotheses
The fifth instar caterpillars will go into pupae and emerge more quickly
in the heat than in the cold. This will happen because monarchs are cold-blooded
and so are the temperature-dependent pupae. Those in the warmer weather
will go through the cycle more quickly than those in the cold. The caterpillars
in the cold will either freeze to death, or they will take longer to
go into the pupa and emerge because they will be using so much energy,
just trying to stay warm.
Background Information
Through our research we found that the pupae are temperature dependent
and that the shortest life cycles are generally in areas that have long
warm periods. We also found out that cold air will make these cold-blooded
insects freeze to death. Monarchs are unable to travel in cold weather,
and therefore lay their eggs and start their travel south soon enough
so that they will not freeze. When the monarchs emerge in cold, they
are biologically and behaviorally different than the monarchs that emerge
in the spring and will not lay their eggs or mate until the following
spring.
Materials
- four caterpillars
- refrigerator
- heat pad
- two shoe boxes
- fresh milkweed
- big box
(the size of the inside of the refrigerator)
- two thermometers
- two aluminum sheets
Controls
During this experiment, the lights were always off and the boxes were
the same size so that the results were only affected by temperature.
The boxes were in the same spots and the test samples were checked at
the same time each day so that the results would be accurate. The same
caterpillars were used throughout the whole experiment. All of these
things were done to get as accurate information as possible.
Variables
The dependent variable was the pupae being affected because they relied
on the temperature to survive. The independent variable was the temperature
because that stayed the same whether the pupae died or not.
Procedure
- Find four shoe boxes.
- Write group name and box number on each to tell the boxes apart.
- Put one fourth instar caterpillar in each box.
- Put damp paper towel and two milkweed leaves in each box and change
daily.
- Record size, activity, and how much eaten on the first day for each
test sample. ( ex. Cold #1: 37 mm.; Color: normal; Didn't curl up when
touched; Ate-. 1/10 of a leaf. Cold #2 ... )
- Put two shoe boxes in the refrigerator with a thermometer.
- Check and record the temperature and any observations of the larvae
- Place two heat pads on medium setting between two aluminum sheets
and place in big box.
- Put the other thermometer and the other two shoe boxes inside the
big box.
- Check and record the temperature and any observations of the larvae
each day.
- Record how quickly each larva goes into a pupa and when each emerges,
as well as any deaths.
- Record any significant observations about each pupa (color, size,
temperature, etc.).
Conclusion
In this experiment I tested larvae pupating and emerging
while being affected by heat or cold. Each test sample was in a separate container
to get the most accurate results. I did this to see if the monarchs
that go through their cycle in the late summer or early fall are different
than the ones starting the cycle earlier on.
The larvae in the cold, as illustrated on my graph, were much slower
in pupating and emerging, and the test sample number one didn't even
pupate. Each day, the one of the larva seemed to shrink and become less
and less alive. By the third day, it had stopped eating, and we were
forced to bring it into room temperature to revive it. The cold must
have been too drastic for it, because three days later it died. They
warm larvae, as illustrated in graph two, had much more successful lives.
Most pupated and emerged many days early, and they were very successful
afterwards.

I felt that while doing this experiment, I had too many variables. This
made it difficult to come to a general conclusion, and display my information.
I don't think that this affected my information enough to further investigate
it, though.
I could have changed the lighting to make it more real to life, but
my data was so drastically different between the two tests that it probably
wouldn't have made a difference. Overall, the results would be similar
each time I tested it because there is proof that monarchs cannot handle
cold. Next time I would just test larvae, or pupae, instead of so many
groups.
I felt that testing larvae pupating and emerging while being affected
by temperature was a good test to see if the monarchs going through the
cycle in the spring would live longer than the ones in the late summer
or early fall. I felt that my experiment was real to life, and as accurate
as I could get it. I learned that pupae cannot live without heat.
Monarch
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