Download a flutter of recovery for butterflies - Biology East Los Angeles College

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

External morphology of Lepidoptera wikipedia , lookup

Insects in culture wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
A Flutter of Recovery for Butterflies
By Jeff Gottlieb, Los Angeles Times
July 30, 2009
El Segundo blue butterflies are making a comeback after being declared an endangered
species.
QuickTime™ and a
TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor
are needed to see this picture.
Mark Boster / Los Angeles Times
An El Segundo blue butterfly on a seacliff buckwheat flower lets a photographer get a
closeup on dunes near Los Angeles International Airport.
Thirty-three years after being classified an endangered species, the El Segundo blue
butterfly is flourishing on 200 acres of sand dunes near Los Angeles International
Airport.
Entomologist Richard Arnold, a consultant to the airport, said Wednesday that the
butterfly population there has grown to 35,000 to 100,000 insects, depending on the
year, up from a few thousand when the federal government placed it on the endangered
list in 1976.
Arnold took a group of reporters and airport employees on a search for the butterflies at
El Segundo dunes, southwest of the north runway, an area off-limits to the public.
They weren't hard to find, darting through seacliff buckwheat, trading places with bees
and cabbage butterflies.
The black, white and orange El Segundo blue -- the male has blue on top of its wings -stays close to the plant that is so important to its life cycle.
The larvae feed on the seeds inside the plants' flower head, a collection of tiny flowers
that look like a puff of cotton, and the adults suck out the nectar.
The El Segundo blue, with a wingspan the size of a thumbnail, was the third insect
classified an endangered species, after two insects in Florida.
There are now about 50 insects on the federal endangered species list, Arnold said.
There is, he said, some wildlife in the dunes that is even rarer than the butterfly.
Until recently, the butterfly was thought to be found only on the southeastern shores of
Santa Monica Bay.
But the largest population by far is now found near the airport, with smaller colonies on
two acres at Chevron's El Segundo refinery, on private land in Torrance and, in a
migration that has surprised experts, at beaches in Torrance and Redondo Beach.
In the last few years, another group of El Segundo blues has been found at Vandenberg
Air Force Base in Santa Barbara County, Arnold said.
Once there were homes on the airport land, but LAX bought them and demolished them
in the late 1960s and early '70s when the noise from jets became too loud.
"Butterflies don't seem to mind the noise," Arnold said as a jet roared above him.
Most of the restoration effort in the dunes has been focused on planting seacliff
buckwheat and clearing nonnative weeds and grasses that make it difficult for it to grow.
Although two airport employees work full time at the task, the area is still filled with dry
weeds.
The butterfly life cycle is a year, and they live as adults only four to seven days, Arnold
said.
In that brief period, females typically mate and lay eggs, more than 99% of which never
complete the cycle into adulthood.
The butterfly flight season, when the pupae become adults, runs from mid-June through
mid-August.
Arnold said that two weeks ago, at the peak of the season, he counted 4,800 butterflies,
which was about 10% more than last year.
The top number was the 7,000 he counted six or seven years ago.
Although he was happy with the way the insect has rebounded, Arnold said more seacliff
buckwheat would mean more El Segundo blues.
"I don't want to create the mistaken impression that nothing needs to be done to benefit
the butterfly," he said.
[email protected]
2