The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Monarch butterflie­s get royal treatment in couple’s garden

Rescue efforts aim to help bolster species’ numbers.

- By Patricia Sheridan

O’HARA, PA. — Joanne and Don Lightner are dedicated to saving the reign of the endangered Monarch butterfly. The Pennsylvan­ia couple are actually raising them as way to help maintain their numbers in North America.

“We are down to 10% of what the population used to be worldwide,” said Joanne Lightner.

Monarch butterflie­s face a host of dangers new and old.

“Pesticides, GMOs, habitat destructio­n, other insects, birds and climate change are all having an effect on the butterflie­s,” said Joanne Lightner. “The wildfires on the West Coast have impacted that migration route.”

Don Lightner is a retired architect who now spends his summer days hunting butterfly eggs with a magnifying glass

“I go out and find either eggs or very small caterpilla­rs and bring them in to protect them,” he said.

The reason for these extreme measures is that in the wild there is only about a 5% chance they make it from egg to full butterfly.

The couple feed them until they turn to chrysalis, and then protect them until they emerge as butterflie­s.

“This year I released about 18,” said Don Lightner. “We then release them into our gardens.”

“Last year, we released 38 butterflie­s. We have over a 90% success rate,” noted Joanne Lightner.

Their garden features much of what the Monarch thrives on, including common milkweed and swamp milkweed. There are also plenty of native lilies and wild flowers.

Two years ago, a friend in eastern Pennsylvan­ia got the couple interested in this rescue mission.

“I said, ‘We have butterflie­s,’ and she encouraged us to get started,” he recalled.

The Lightners were already gathering milkweed seed for Beechwood Farms Nature Reserve and its native plant center. As volunteers, they gather and sow native seeds and propagate plants for sale.

Milkweed is critical to Monarch butterflie­s’ life cycle.

“It is the only thing the larvae eat, and it is the only plant they lay their eggs on,” Joanne Lightner said.

The couple have lined their driveway with the plants and added them to their impressive garden. An added benefit of milkweed is that it makes Monarch caterpilla­rs taste bitter, she said.

“If a bird eats a caterpilla­r, it will vomit. They only do it once.”

The Lightners do much more for the butterflie­s than just plant milkweed. He brings Monarch eggs inside and places them on a leaf in a mesh tent. Their nursery, also known as a cloud tent, contains waterfille­d beer bottles that hold cuttings of milkweed plants.

“We wash the leaves when we bring them in to feed the caterpilla­rs because there can be a virus on the leaves,” Joanne Lightner noted. “You have to bring them in before they get parasitize­d.”

In the wild, only three of 100 Monarch eggs turn into butterflie­s because a fly lays its eggs on the larvae, and the parasitic maggots kill many young caterpilla­rs. “This is why we bring them in and protect them,” she added.

Once safely inside the tent, most eggs hatch caterpilla­rs that eventually emerge from chrysalis pods as butterflie­s. Many schoolchil­dren are familiar with the amazing process. The chrysalis goes from green to dark green to clear. When the butterfly is ready to emerge — in 10 days to two weeks — the chrysalis becomes very clear, and you can see the butterfly within.

On the Lightners’ kitchen table are two empty 10-gallon aquariums where recently emerged butterflie­s hang onto the clear capsules, drying off and gaining strength. It can take six generation­s for Monarchs to travel from the Mexican hills of Michoacan to the northeaste­rn United States.

“They fly across the Gulf of Mexico to Texas, where they mate, lay eggs and die,” she said. “Then that brood will fly a little farther north, and they do that at least four times.” It takes two generation­s for the return to Mexico.

Monarchs winter in the El Rosario sanctuary in Michoacan, where they are protected by men with machetes. Guides take small groups on horseback to see the sleeping butterflie­s and insist on silence as you pass through a forest of trees covered in millions of butterflie­s. It is part of the Monarch Butterfly Biosphere Reserve, a UNESCO World Heritage site.

Saving the Monarch is important to our ecosystem because like bees, they are pollinator­s. They are also a food source for other insects and animals.

“You never really know when you take something out of the ecosystem what effect it has, and you weaken the entire system,” said Joanne Lightner. “So when you protect the Monarchs, you are saving an entire ecosystem.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY PATRICIA SHERIDAN/PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE/TNS ?? Caterpilla­rs feast on tender Milkweed leaves in the incubation tent in O’Hara, Pa., at the home of Don and JoAnne Lightner, who are raising Monarch butterflie­s to help maintain their numbers in North America.
PHOTOS BY PATRICIA SHERIDAN/PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE/TNS Caterpilla­rs feast on tender Milkweed leaves in the incubation tent in O’Hara, Pa., at the home of Don and JoAnne Lightner, who are raising Monarch butterflie­s to help maintain their numbers in North America.
 ?? ?? In their garden, Don and JoAnne Lightner rescue Monarch butterfly eggs and raise them to release them. They feed and protect caterpilla­rs until they emerge as butterflie­s.
In their garden, Don and JoAnne Lightner rescue Monarch butterfly eggs and raise them to release them. They feed and protect caterpilla­rs until they emerge as butterflie­s.

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