06/10/2016 News

The migratory painted lady butterfly can cross the Sahara

Social communication manager

Verónica Couto Antelo

Passionate about science, climate and global change outreach and the analysis of social movements and climate justice. Trained as a biologist with a specialisation in biodiversity (UB, 2015), but from
Share

A study with the participation of Constantí Stefanescu, researcher at CREAF and the Granollers Natural Science Museum, has revealed that the migratory painted lady butterfly makes a trip which is even more difficult than previously thought. While it was already known that the butterfly travels from Europe to Morocco, chemical analyses have shown that it can even go as far as the Sahel, in the process crossing the enormous Sahara Desert. 

Vanessa cardui). Credit: Oriol Massana.
Vanessa cardui. Credit: Oriol Massana.

Spreading its wings, it begins a long journey, sometimes upwards of 4,000 km. It crosses mountains, seas, and even the famous Sahara Desert: it is Vanessa cardui, the painted lady butterfly. An article published on October 5th in the journal Biology Letters has demonstrated that these lepidopterans (a term referring to the taxonomical order that includes moths and butterflies) are capable of making a very difficult migration. While one part of the population flies from Europe to Morocco, another can go as far as the Sahara in search of warmer temperatures in order to reproduce. This discovery was made thanks to the participation of researchers from the University of Western Ontario in Canada who analyzed isotopes (chemical elements of particular characteristics) in butterflies from Europe, Morocco, and a number of subtropical African countries.

Painted lady butterflies from Europe and the Sahara are found in Morocco

Until now it was thought that the butterfly Vanessa cardui made a journey from Europe to Morocco in order to find optimal conditions to reproduce and then die. If this distance was not already impressive enough, the new study has now shown another surprising aspect of this amazing migration.

In autumn, when temperatures in Europe begin to decline, Vanessa cardui flies to the Maghreb region where it will leave its descendants in an environment which assures their survival. However, some populations of the butterfly decide to continue the adventure and cross the Sahara Desert to the Sahel. There, they reproduce during the rainy season, but once the caterpillars have transformed into adults the dry season arrives, and this is a very difficult period for survival. Therefore, they must fly northwards to Morocco where temperatures are more stable and humidity is greater. Once they have arrived, they join the young of the other butterflies that had stayed in Morocco, and it is at this moment that ecologists are able to find massive concentrations of this butterfly.

Counting Vanessa cardui between the cards in Morocco. Credit: CREAF.
Counting Vanessa cardui between the cards in Morocco. Credit: CREAF.

Isotopes allow the study of the voyages of butterflies

Stable isotopes are special varieties of a given chemical element, in which the nucleus has a different number of neutrons than normal. Many specialists use stable isotopes for studying migratory movements of animals, such as was the case in this study with Vanessa cardui.

In this international study which had the participation of CREAF researchers, isotopes of hydrogen called deuterium were introduced into the caterpillars of the painted lady butterfly. Once the caterpillar had transformed into a butterfly and made its voyage, it was marked by this special chemical element and the researchers were able to follow its route. This way, they were able to know the origin of specific individuals and for the first time they were able to demonstrate that not all of them came from Europe.

 

ARTICLE

Stefanescu C., et al. (2016). Long-distance autumn migration across the Sahara by painted lady butterflies: exploiting resource pulses in the tropical savannah. Biology Letters. DOI: 10.1098/rsbl.2016.0561

Related news

News
COP16 image
News

COP16, one more step but with an undercurrent of frustration

News
Nou web CREAF
News

CREAF unveils its new digital home!

News
Memòria CREAF
News

CICLES, CREAF’s new annual magazine