Floating Flowers in the Sky

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FLOATING FLOWERS IN THE SKY The challenge and importance of counting butterflies. By Shane Sater

DELICATE DAZZLER The Melissa blue butterfly lives throughout Montana in wet meadows, moist streamsides, open woodlands, parks, and gardens.

16 | JULY–AUGUST 2020 | FWP.MT.GOV/MTOUTDOORS

LEFT TO RIGHT: RICHARD J. JACKSON; JESSE LEE VARNADO

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he parking lot at the main Rattle- them requires stealth and lightning-quick band running along the back of its black snake trailhead near Missoula is reflexes. In the dappled light of a small wings. DuBois identifies it as a Milbert’s bustling this July morning. An meadow, I spot one resting on a wildflower. tortoiseshell, an uncommon species this unusual group has gathered at one I swing my net and quickly twist the handle time of year, she says. We mark it down in end, carrying insect nets, field guides, to close the bag. The butterfly flutters a notebook and let it flutter away. and binoculars. These butterfly watchers are taking part in the BUTTERFLY BASICS annual Five Valleys Butterfly Butterflies are shape-shifters. Count. With a forecast for sunny Each starts life as an egg, hatches skies and highs in the upper 70s, into a voracious caterpillar, rests the weather looks promising. as a comatose pupa, then trans“Butterflies are solar-powered. forms into a winged wonder. They need sunlight to warm Montana hosts roughly 200 them up so they can fly,” says butterfly species of remarkable Kristi DuBois, a former regional diversity. Many survive just a few Nongame Wildlife Program weeks as adults, while others coordinator for Montana Fish, may live as long as eight months. Wildlife & Parks who has led this Some spend the winter as eggs count for the past 12 years. or pupae. Others hibernate as Our goal is to identify all the adults, one-fifth of a gram of butterflies we see. A few species insect somehow surviving are easy to distinguish, even at Montana’s brutal cold. A few, like a distance. Others are much the monarch and painted lady, harder. Using light mesh bags on can migrate hundreds of miles in The Milbert’s tortoiseshell is a common Montana butterfly found statewide in gardens, parks, wet meadows, and moist streamsides. four-foot handles, the plan is to spring and fall to and from southcatch, examine, and release. ern wintering areas. Butterflies are surprisingly wary. Netting inside, uninjured though no doubt surPlants, consumed in the caterpillar stage, prised. Another participant helps me gently are essential for butterfly development. transfer it to a collapsible mesh box. Some butterfly caterpillars are generalists, Shane Sater is a biology student at Carroll Through the plastic viewing window, the feeding on a variety of vegetation. Others College in Helena and a part-time employee with the Montana Natural Heritage Program. butterfly is gorgeous, with a flame-colored are specialized. The Milbert’s tortoiseshell MONTANA OUTDOORS | 17


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