Kapiti News

Couple give monarch butterfly numbers a boost

- David Haxton

Waikanae couple Cathy Kern and Alistair Betts have been unexpected­ly busy in their garden. What started as a curiosity had bloomed into an amateur but fullscale monarch butterfly-raising nursery.

“We had no idea what we were getting into,” Cathy said.

It all started when some housesitte­rs planted swan plants on their property last year.

The plants attracted the interest of monarch butterflie­s, which laid eggs on them and started one of nature’s most intriguing metamorpho­sis processes from egg, larvae (caterpilla­r), pre-pupa, pupa (chrysalis) to adult.

The couple planted some leftover swan plants but as the plantmunch­ing caterpilla­rs multiplied, they went to Harrison’s Gardenworl­d and Mitre 10 Mega to get more swan plants.

“I don’t know how often we’ve been to both garden centres,” she said.

They’ve been keeping the egg numbers in check, as well as relocating praying mantises, which have enjoyed picking off many younger caterpilla­rs.

The swan plants are in various stages of destructio­n courtesy of the hungry caterpilla­rs, and various chrysalise­s have been appearing in vegetation, the side of a box, under

a window sill, and lots more places. They also discovered some of the

caterpilla­rs, ones, enjoy

especially the larger eating pumpkin and cucumber, but the Moths and Butterflie­s of NZ Trust discourage the use of alternativ­e foods as it risked pupa emerging into healthy butterflie­s and risked long-term damage to internal organs.

Cathy said their Siberian forest cat, Dame Pistachio, had taken an interest too, “but she’s never pestered them”.

She noted the garden was “going gangbuster­s this year” for some reason.

“We’ve had peaches for the first time in four years. And everything else is going crazy. It feels like it’s super-healthy.”

Alistair said they were enjoying helping maintain a healthy monarch butterfly population and were fascinated by the butterfly species’ lifecycle.

 ?? Photo / David Haxton ?? Two hungry monarch butterfly caterpilla­rs devour a swan plant.
Photo / David Haxton Two hungry monarch butterfly caterpilla­rs devour a swan plant.
 ?? Photo / David Haxton ?? A monarch butterfly and caterpilla­r enjoy a swan plant.
Photo / David Haxton A monarch butterfly and caterpilla­r enjoy a swan plant.

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