Beth Zaiken

Willow Creek Middle School
Rochester, MN
Abstract
I gave 7 monarch larvae a choice of ingesting newly
sprouted common milkweed leaves or mature leaves in a controlled
environment and recorded their daily consumption. The purpose
of this experiment was to determine whether or not monarch larvae
would display a diet preference.
In the end, 48% of the larvae tested consumed new
leaves, 14% consumed mature leaves, 19% did not show a preference,
and 19% were not active due to molting. Only 7 larvae (A-G)
were tested (although their milkweed consumption was observed daily
for a total of 36 experimental repetitions). Individual larvae
results were as follows: 4 preferred new leaves, 1 preferred mature
leaves, and 2 did not show any observable preference.
I believe testing a greater number of larvae and observing
their preference for only one day per larvae would increase the
accuracy of my results. My data does seem to indicate that
monarch larvae do prefer the newly sprouted milkweed leaves over
the more mature ones. It is interesting to note that individual
larva were sometimes observed on both sides of the experimental
container but only ate the new leaves.
Observation
I have been feeding my monarch larvae a mixture of
very newly sprouted, small common milkweed leaves and large mature
leaves for many summers now. It seems that they will eat both
types, but I've wondered if they might actually have a preference.
In mid-August and September, I had consistently observed an unusually
high number of monarch butterflies in a field near my home (just
north of Apache Mall). The weeds and grass in this field are
typically cut in mid-summer so the milkweed at the time of my observations
was relatively young.
Question
In my experiment, I attempted to determine whether
or not larvae prefer new or mature milkweed leaves. Of course
this refers to raising them in captivity. So the question
I tried to answer was..."If given a choice of new vs. mature
milkweed leaves, which type do monarch larvae raised in captivity
prefer?".
Hypothesis
If captive monarch larvae are given a diet choice
between new (6 to 10 cm) milkweed leaves, or mature (15 cm or greater)
milkweed leaves, I thought that they would eat the new leaves.
Experiment
In my experiment, I used monarch larvae in various
stages of molting. Small larvae (1st - 2nd instar) were placed
in the center of petri dishes and large larvae (3rd - 5th instar)
were placed in the center of a 7 x 11 x 2 in white plastic container
covered with a screen. To the sides of each container, I placed
equal amounts of fresh (picked daily) milkweed leaves cut to the
same size. One side of each container held only pieces of
new milkweed leaves, while the other side had only pieces of mature
milkweed leaves.
The maturity of milkweed leaves, new (6-10 cm) vs.
mature (>15 cm) was my experimental variable. Each larvae
was placed directly in the center of each container, in a buffer
zone where no milkweed was present. Each individual larva
was required to locate a pile of food (new or old). After
24 hours, I recorded how much of each type of milkweed was eaten.
No variation in lighting or background color (white) was present
during my experiment.
This experiment was repeated with 7 larvae in various
instars, 36 times. My experiment was replicated as many times
as possible before the first frost killed my source of fresh milkweed
leaves. Freshly picked (daily) milkweed was one of the control
requirements for my testing. The size of the milkweed pieces,
lighting, background color, and equal amounts of milkweed in each
corner of my testing containers were other factors that I kept the
same in each experiment.
Analysis of Results
Daily experiment results on each larva (A-G)
were recorded on my Larvae Preference Data Spreadsheet. My
results were then compiled into percentages and visually represented
in a pie chart according to the following categories:
- more new leaves consumed
- more mature leaves consumed
- equal amounts consumed
- molting
Conclusion
My captive raised larvae clearly seem to prefer young
milkweed leaves over mature ones. This conclusion is drawn
from the fact that 48% of the larvae tested consumed the new milkweed
leaves, 14% ate mature leaves, 19% showed no preference, and 19%
of the larvae on a given day were not consuming any milkweed because
they were molting.
Next Time
I would like to see my data reproduced by another
researcher and compare our conclusions. If I were to repeat
my experiment, I would do so in August, perform 100 repetitions,
and compile data on 1st-2nd instar larvae and 3rd-5th instar larvae
separately.
I am specifically interested in this research because
of my observation of a field near my home. This field is mowed
mid-summer and by late summer, the milkweed regrowth is predominantly
new plants. I wonder if timed mowing of milkweed fields could
possibly affect the number of surviving larvae and ultimately, monarch
numbers overall.
Monarch
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