Daily Press

Newport News museum exhibit raising butterfly awareness

- By Jessica Nolte Jessica Nolte, 757-912-1675, jnolte@dailypress.com

A museum in Newport News is giving visitors an up-close view of a variety of butterflie­s, including a well-known species recently declared at risk of extinction.

The Virginia Living Museum released hundreds of butterflie­s and caterpilla­rs into its Butterfly Haven exhibit last Friday. The exhibit includes monarch butterflie­s — declared an endangered species two weeks ago by the Internatio­nal Union for the Conservati­on of Nature, a global authority on the status of biological diversity.

The exhibit is the latest activity in a series of butterfly conservati­on efforts in which the museum has participat­ed throughout the past 30 years. It will give visitors a chance to see native butterflie­s and learn about their life stages.

The museum is using the exhibit to raise awareness of the challenges monarchs face during their annual migration. The species is struggling because of deforestat­ion in Mexico, extreme climate fluctuatio­ns in North America and the destructio­n of milkweed, a key source of food for monarch caterpilla­rs.

“It’s the usual suspects: habitat destructio­n, pesticides, and increased severe weather,” James Weinpress, the museum’s senior director of living exhibits, said in a news release. “These butterflie­s are expected to migrate thousands of miles and without proper access to the right food in their various stages of life, which makes the migration extremely difficult.”

Monarch butterflie­s have

long been considered a threatened species, but July marked the first time that they were officially declared at risk of extinction, according to National Geographic. The monarch population has declined by somewhere between 23 and 72% over the past 10 years.

As part of the effort to save the butterflie­s, the museum urges gardeners to plant native plant species, which are best suited for the local

climate and soils, according to the release. Butterflie­s also rely on milkweed for breeding grounds.

The museum sells a collection of butterfly, nectar and host plants daily and will be hosting a plant sale in September. The exhibit will remain open until Sept. 25 and is included with museum admission.

 ?? VIRGINIA LIVING MUSEUM ?? Monarch butterflie­s were declared in July to be at risk of extinction.
VIRGINIA LIVING MUSEUM Monarch butterflie­s were declared in July to be at risk of extinction.

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