Manila Bulletin

Decades after a US butterfly species vanished, a close relative is released to fill gap

- By HAVEN DALEY and OLGA R. RODRIGUEZ

SAN FRANCISCO, California (AP) — More than 80 years ago, a beautiful butterfly called Xerces Blue that once fluttered among San Francisco's coastal dunes went extinct as stately homes, museums and parks ate up its habitat, marking the first butterfly species in the United States to disappear due to human developmen­t.

But thanks to years of research and modern technology a close relative of the shimmery iridescent butterfly species has been reintroduc­ed to the dunes in Presidio National Park in San Francisco. Dozens of Silvery Blue butterflie­s — the closest living relatives of the Xerces Blue — were released in the restored habitat last week, officials said Monday.

Scientists with San Francisco’s California Academy of Sciences utilized the Academy’s genetic sequencing capabiliti­es and analyzed Xerces Blue specimens in their vast collection to confirm a group of Silvery Blues in Monterey County, about 100 miles (160 kilometers) south of San Francisco, could successful­ly fill the ecological gap left by the Xerces Blue.

“This isn’t a Jurassic Park-style deextincti­on project, but it will have a major impact,” said Durrell Kapan, a senior research fellow and the lead Academy researcher on the project. “The Silvery Blue will act as an ecological ‘standin’ for the Xerces Blue, performing the same ecosystem functions as both a pollinator and a critical member of the food web."

The iconic butterfly, whose name inspired the Xerces Society, an environmen­tal nonprofit that focuses on the conservati­on of invertebra­tes, went extinct in the 1940s.

Chris Grinter, the collection manager of entomology at California Academy of Sciences, said it all started by using their collection­s and "modern technology, genome sequencing to go back and extract genomes from these extinct butterflie­s that are over 100, 150 years old.”

Meanwhile, the Presidio Trust and other organizati­ons worked to restore the butterflie­s’ native dunes, planting deerweed — a preferred host plant of the Xerces Blue and the Silvery Blue butterflie­s.

Wildlife experts collected dozens of Silvery Blue butterflie­s in Monterey County, marked them for future identifica­tion and transporte­d them to San Francisco, feeding them a few drops of fruit punch-flavored Gatorade along the way.

The team will continue to track their movements using high-resolution photograph­s to identify their markings and learn ways to replicate the habitat regenerati­on lessons learned, said Scott Sampson, executive director of the California Academy of Sciences.

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