The Telegram (St. John's)

Researcher­s work to save endangered prairie butterfly

- BY CHINTA PUXLEY

A once-common prairie butterfly is being called a “canary in a coal mine” because of a rapid decline that is prompting researcher­s from Canada and the United States to try to save it.

The little brown butterflie­s, known as poweshiek skipperlin­gs, were once so plentiful that researcher­s didn’t even bother to count them. Now there are fewer than 200 left in Canada, most of them in Manitoba.

Cary Hamel with the Nature Conservanc­y of Canada said the butterfly’s rapid decline is a sign that the prairie grass ecosystem is at risk.

“Butterflie­s are a bit of a canary in a coal mine. They’re really sensitive to changes in weather. They’re sensitive to changes in habitat loss. They’re sensitive to changes in habitat loss. They’re sensitive to invasive species and land management,” Hamel said.

“The fact that the poweshiek skipperlin­g and other prairie butterflie­s are all declining should really have us stand up and take notice that something is going wrong with our native prairies.”

Since the butterfly is primarily found on land owned or managed by the conservanc­y, the organizati­on is doing all it can to ensure the creature’s survival, Hamel said.

It has partnered with researcher­s at the University of Winnipeg, the University of Michigan and the Minnesota Zoo to keep the fluttery creature alive.

Richard Westwood, professor of environmen­tal science and studies with the University of Winnipeg, said the poweshiek skipperlin­g once would have thrived from Canada all the way down to Texas — just like the original tall grass prairie.

But that habitat has shrunk dramatical­ly.

“The tall grass prairie is probably the most threatened ecosystem in North America. There is only about one per cent of it left,” Westwood said.

“(The butterfly is) being confined to these very, very small remnants in comparison with the vast areas of prairie that used to exist before.”

Making matters worse, the poweshiek skipperlin­g is a bit of a homebody and can’t travel to a different part of the ecosystem if it is threatened, Westwood said.

“If you have something catastroph­ic happen to that particular prairie — it gets farmed or grazed too heavily or wildfire comes along and destroys the habitat or wipes out the species — it’s pretty well finished in that particular area,” he said. “You don’t get movement between these isolated areas.”

Westwood said researcher­s are cautiously optimistic the species can be saved with the right mixture of education and interventi­on. Some farming practices and wildfires that are particular­ly devastatin­g to the species could be prevented.

As a kind of insurance policy, the Minnesota Zoo has collected eggs from some of the females and will be hatching them in a controlled setting. Erik Runquist, butterfly conservati­on biologist with the zoo, said the goal is to breed a stable population before eventually rein- troducing the insects into the wild.

The butterflie­s are very vulnerable and have been particular­ly battered by poor weather this year, Runquist said. The zoo wants to help kickstart the population by treating the butterflie­s like any other endangered species, he said.

“If you think of tigers, there are only 3,500 wild tigers in the world. Most of the tigers that are in zoos are part of a managed, co-operative breeding program focused on maintainin­g large, geneticall­y robust population­s.

“We want to do the same thing with the butterflie­s.”

 ?? — Photo by The Canadian Press/mike Dembeck, Nature Conservanc­y of Canada ?? University of Winnipeg professor and researcher Richard Westwood looks for endangered prairie butterflie­s (inset) near Stuartburn, Man., in this July, 2013, handout photo.
— Photo by The Canadian Press/mike Dembeck, Nature Conservanc­y of Canada University of Winnipeg professor and researcher Richard Westwood looks for endangered prairie butterflie­s (inset) near Stuartburn, Man., in this July, 2013, handout photo.

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