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A monarch butterfly rests on a flower at Dillingham Garden in Enid, Okla. Every year, monarch butterflies migrate south to Mexico.

(Billy Hefton/Enid News & Eagle/AP)

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How monarch butterflies find their way to Mexico

A new study shows that the butterflies' antennae are key.

By RANDOLPH E. SCHMID  |  AP Science Writer/ September 28, 2009 edition

Chip Taylor/Monarch Watch/AP

Researchers found that monarch butterflies find their way to Mexico every fall by using their antennae.


WASHINGTON

Millions of monarch butterflies migrate to Mexico for the winter and scientists have long speculated on how the insects find their way. Turns out, their antennas are the key.

How do we know? Well, researchers painted butterfly antennas black, and the insects got lost.

Managing to fly south may not sound like a big deal to people armed with maps and GPS receivers, but all butterflies have for navigation is the sun in the sky.

And the sun keeps moving, so the little creatures have to constantly adjust to stay on course throughout the day.

Like most animals, monarchs have a so-called circadian clock in their brain that helps them know what time it is. Knowing the time and the position of the sun allows them to orient to the south.

But monarch butterflies have a second clock based in their antennas, which also sense light, according to the new study led by Steven M. Reppert, chairman of neurobiology at the University of Massachusetts Medical School.

“Whatever we learn about the insect … is going to tell us a little bit more about how our brain works,” said Dr. Reppert, who studies the internal clocks in the brains of animals, including people.

Plus, he added in a telephone interview, “it’s fascinating biology that’s begging to be understood.”

Researchers had thought the navigation took place in the brain of the butterfly, but this experiment shows that the brain and antenna each has a circadian clock and they work together, he said.

The researchers, whose study appears in Friday’s edition of the journal Science, did the test by holding the butterfly wings gently and dipping their antennas in enamel paint.

The ones with black paint were unable to orient to the south, they found, while butterflies whose antennas were coated with clear paint had no trouble navigating.

That not only showed the antennas were sensing light for navigating, it also showed that the sense of smell isn’t involved in finding the way, since both paints blocked that ability.

And, since the animals with black paint got lost even though their eyes were able to see light, the researchers concluded the antennas were vital to finding the way.

Butterflies whose antennas were surgically removed also became disoriented.

Charalambos P. Kyriacou of the University of Leicester, England, said the experiment indicates that the antennas serve as a sort of stand-alone global positioning system for the insects.

“The antenna clock appears to override any input from the brain clock for navigation,” Kyriacou, who was not part of Reppert’s research team, said in a commentary on the report.

Reppert’s research was funded by the National Institutes of Health.

Editor’s note: If you’d like to read more about the monarch butterflies’ migration – including earlier scientific knowledge on the topic – check out this Monitor article. 

For more articles about the environment, see the Monitor’s main environment page, which offers information on many environment topics. Also, check out our Bright Green blog archive and our RSS feed.

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Comments

1. Don Griffith | 09.29.09

Man thinks he is pretty smart, but actually he knows very little, definitively, about much of anything. If you ask a neurologist how the brain thinks, he will give you a number of theories (or perhaps just his favorite), but when pushed to give specifics, the honest investigator will concede, “We really don’t know for sure, but it seems as though this theory might be correct.” And often he will close the conversation by saying, “But, it thinks. We know that, or we wouldn’t be talking to each other right now!”

Man starts with material effects and tries to draw conclusions regarding the effect, but unless he begins with a spiritual cause, we will always stumble around in darkness, because truth doesn’t live in matter or materiality. Truth is higher, infinite, eternal, consistent, unchanging. Little creatures who don’t know this respond to it in what man considers “unusual ways.” He thinks they are materially explainable. And in the process, he misses the real answers. Infinite Mind is the only cause, and Mind shines through in the special things we observe creatures do but can never fully explain.

How does the monarch find his way to Mexico? The same way honey bees “tell” each other where special flowers are located or arctic terns return to sites thousands of miles away, or chickens and turkeys attach to animate objects they treat as though they are their parents. Man uses terms like, “genetic” “instinct” “imprint.” But, for the most part, these are “I really don’t know” words. A better explanation is “This is infinite Love shining through with less interference than man is used to seeing in his life, because he believes he is the intelligence in the universe. God’s creatures are beloved, protected, and provided for by Him/Her. Man has separated himself from God through his misguided sense of mortal intelligence–thinking that all things must be explained by some material cause.

As a long ago song stated in its lyrics, “It ain’t necessarily so!”

2. phil | 09.30.09

THE MIGHTY MONARCH!

3. Mike Gates | 09.30.09

I liked the use of the phrase “surgically removed” - like that made it alright.

4. Doris Jeanette, Psy.D. | 10.06.09

I find the information interesting but I don’t like the way they band, paint and kill my butterflies. They are beautiful, magical and sacred. Man needs to respect them and stop destroying the plants they need in order to flourish. Man does not love and care for his fellow companions, he studies them from afar. Far better to be a butterfly.

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