Tag Archives: Conservancy

Butterflies take flight: Meijer Gardens expect a quarter million visitors for 31st annual exhibition

A golden Helicon butterfly from Central and South America. (WKTV/Ruth Thornton)


Ruth Thornton is a WKTV Contributor. She holds master’s degrees in journalism and fisheries and wildlife, both from Michigan State University. Before working as a journalist, she worked in conservation for many years in Michigan, Minnesota and West Virginia. Her work has appeared in many media outlets, including MLive, the Detroit Free Press, Bridge Michigan, Capital News Service and Great Lakes Echo. You can follow her work via her Substack newsletter, Nature Signals, and at ruththornton.com.

By Ruth Thornton
WKTV Contributor
greer@wktv.org


Around a quarter million people are once again expected to experience the 31st annual tropical butterfly exhibition at Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park, escaping the cold and blustery Michigan spring weather for a few hours.

More than 7,000 butterflies from Central and South America, Asia and Africa will delight visitors at Fred and Dorothy Fichter Butterflies are Blooming, the nation’s largest temporary tropical butterfly exhibition. It runs from March 1 through April 30 at 1000 East Beltline Ave. NE in Grand Rapids. 

The first butterfly exhibit was held the year Frederik Meijer Gardens opened, said Wendy Overbeck Dunham, the director of horticulture. 




“The idea was that in Michigan in March and April, we’re past the beauty of winter and we’ve made it to that stage where things aren’t quite warm enough to do stuff outside,” Overbeck Dunham said. ”You can visit the tropics without even leaving West Michigan this way.” 

Visitors come from Michigan and beyond

Visitors flock to see the butterflies from Michigan and beyond. “We do see people from all over the United States during this exhibition,” said John VanderHaagen, the director of communications.
 

Visitors admire emerging butterflies at the observation station. (WKTV/Ruth Thornton)



Visiting from eastern Michigan were Lori and Mike Wuerth from Romeo, who made the trip to see the butterflies. 

They said they often watch butterflies and are members of the Detroit Zoo, which also boasts a butterfly house, and have visited butterfly exhibitions in Michigan and in Canada. This exhibition rivals the nicest they had seen, they said. 


Every year is different

The types of butterflies differ from year to year.


“Butterflies are farmed just like fruit crops are farmed,” Overbeck Dunham said. “Availability can depend on season, weather. Whether it’s been rainy, whether it’s been unusually cold where they come from, whether it’s been extra dry.”

The bustle starts well before the exhibition’s opening day: butterflies start arriving in mid-February. That’s when the biggest shipments arrive from the farms and the huge tropical conservatory  – five stories high and 15,000 square feet in size – starts filling with butterflies, she said. 


Popular common morpho butterflies emerge from their chrysalises at the observation station. Their inner wings are a brilliant blue.(WKTV/Ruth Thornton)



On average, each butterfly lives and flies for about two weeks, depending on the species, so additional shipments keep coming until mid-April. “As the exhibit goes, we are still getting almost 1,000 in a week,” Overbeck Dunham said. 

“And then by mid-May, there’ll be no more butterflies,” she said. 

Every year, the exhibit gets anywhere from 60 to 85 species, ranging from the small Costa Rica clearwing (Greta oto), aptly named for its transparent wings, to the common morpho (Morpho peleides), a strikingly blue visitor favorite from Central and South America and one of the largest butterflies in the world. They also receive a few moth species, for example, the impressive green African moon moth (Argema mimosae) from sub-Saharan Africa. 

Amber Nelson and her three girls, aged 8 years old and younger, from the Coopersville area, said the stunning blue common morph butterflies are their favorites. 

Nelson said they’ve been coming to the butterfly exhibit for three or four years. “The kids just love the butterflies, their bright colors. And being able to have a nice, slow walk and look at the butterflies until we get hungry,” she said. 

Butterflies are emerging throughout the exhibition

Butterflies are shipped not as the beautiful, winged adults, but in an immature stage called ‘chrysalis,’ created when the caterpillar forms a protective casing and transforms into a butterfly through a process known as ‘metamorphosis.’ 

A popular spot for adults and children alike is the observation station, where the newly arrived chrysalises are pinned on bars to hang, just like they would in their natural homes, until they transform into butterflies.


Great orange tip butterflies emerge at the observation station of the Frederik Meijer Gardens butterfly exhibition. (WKTV/Ruth Thornton)



“When butterflies emerge, what they’ll do is they’ll actually use the chrysalis husk or shell, and they’ll hold onto that with their feet, their bodies,” Overbeck Dunham said. Their abdomens are initially swollen with liquid, and the wings are shriveled and folded. 

As the butterflies hang in the observation station, they pump the liquid from their abdomen to the wings, expanding them as they’re preparing for flight.

When staff see that new butterflies are starting to fly around the observation station, they coax any that are ready into a little glass case for release into the larger butterfly exhibit.

“We’ll walk out of here with a full case of butterflies sometimes,” she said. “It’s a wonderful opportunity for people to get pictures of a cluster – or kaleidoscope (of butterflies).”

Birds share the conservatory with the butterflies

Besides insects, visitors can expect to see several birds flying and running around the exhibition. 

“We have a tropical bird collection in here from tropics around the world,” Overbeck Dunham explained. That includes finches, canaries and Chinese painted quail. 

Some visitors are worried that the birds might eat butterflies, but staff make sure the insects are not in danger. “Our birds are primarily seed eaters, and that is intentional. So that when the butterflies are in here, there isn’t a conflict,” she said. 

Overbeck Dunham has been working on the butterfly exhibit for more than 20 years, but it never grows old, she said.

“I get excited by it every year, it’s my favorite time of year,” she said. “If I’m in here and one is in the process (of emerging), I can’t help but stop and take a moment and watch, because it’s still just the coolest thing in the world to me.”

For more information about the exhibition, visit the Fred & Dorothy Fichter Butterflies are Blooming website. Tickets can be purchased online at MeijerGardens.org/tickets or at the entry desk. Multiple special events are featured throughout March and April, some of which require an RSVP. 

WKTV recently captured video of the Lemery Park Invasive Species Workday



By Cris Greer
WKTV Managing Editor
greer@wktv.org


Check out our WKTV video of the Lemery Park Invasive Species Workday conducted by the Kent Conservation District and Friends of Buck Creek on March 7.


The goal of the Workday was to control the infestation of invasive shrubs and trees along the creek to improve wildlife habitat.

Four invasive species were specifically targeted:
*Bittersweet (vine)
*Honeysuckle (bush)
*Buckthorn (shrub)
*Multiflora Rose (shrub)


The Kent Conservation District and Friends of Buck Creek held an Invasive Species Workday on March 7 at Lemery Park. (WKTV/Owen Herzenstiel)



The Friends of Buck Creek’s Mission is: “To protect and restore the health of the Buck Creek watershed through community education, hands-on stewardship, monitoring and local advocacy.”
For more information on the Friends of Buck Creek, click HERE. Also check out the Kent Conservation District.


Invasive Species Workday on March 7 at Lemery Park. (WKTV/Owen Herzenstiel)

A quest to save a rare Michigan butterfly has high hopes; Poweshiek skipperling all but disappeared

Poweshiek skipperlings were once common throughout prairies in the Midwest, but are now found in only two locations: Manitoba, Canada and southeastern Michigan. (Photo Courtesy, Ruth Thornton/WKTV Contributor)


Ruth Thornton is a WKTV Contributor. She holds master’s degrees in journalism and fisheries and wildlife, both from Michigan State University. Before working as a journalist, she worked in conservation for many years in Michigan, Minnesota and West Virginia. Her work has appeared in many media outlets, including MLive, the Detroit Free Press, Bridge Michigan, Capital News Service and Great Lakes Echo. You can follow her work via her Substack newsletter, Nature Signals, and at ruththornton.com.

By Ruth Thornton
WKTV Contributor
greer@wktv.org

A small butterfly, once a common sight on the prairies of the Midwest, has suddenly vanished and is now the focus of an international partnership racing against time to save it from the brink of extinction. 

“Just how quickly they disappeared is what’s really the alarming thing,” said David Pavlik, a research assistant with Michigan State University. 

Pavlik is part of an international coalition of scientists and conservationists working to save the Poweshiek skipperling (pronounced POW-uh-SHEEK), an inconspicuous orange butterfly that was once so common in the prairies of the Midwest that collectors largely ignored it. 

Now “there are more giant pandas in the world than there are Poweshiek skipperlings,” Pavlik said.

They were once found from the prairies of Manitoba through Minnesota, the eastern Dakotas, Wisconsin, Iowa and into Michigan. They have disappeared from all but two places at the extremes of their range – Manitoba and southeastern Michigan.

The partnership is working to raise the butterflies in zoos for release back into the wild and restore the natural habitats where they once thrived to ensure their long-term survival. 

What happened to the Poweshiek skipperlings?

Cale Nordmeyer, a conservation specialist at the Minnesota Zoo, said the Poweshiek skipperling was common when he was growing up in Minnesota. 

“As a tallgrass prairie specialist, it really thrived in the mesic prairies, in Minnesota and elsewhere here in the upper Midwest,” he said. Mesic prairie is a type of grassland that once flourished throughout the Midwest.

“If you were out in the right prairie at the right time of year, you were going to see Poweshiek skipperlings,” Nordmeyer said. 


Cale Nordmeyer with the Minnesota Zoo is getting ready to release Poweshiek skipperlings raised at John Ball Zoo in 2024. (Photo Courtesy, Ruth Thornton/WKTV Contributor)


Decline began in 2000

That started changing about the year 2000, when researchers noticed they weren’t seeing them as much anymore. 

“Sometime between 2009 and 2012, it looks like we lost all of our Poweshiek skipperling sites in Minnesota,” he said. They also disappeared from most of the rest of their range. 

“Suddenly, these last couple of little populations, many of which were never that big here in far eastern Michigan, suddenly became incredibly important,” Nordmeyer said.

It isn’t obvious why they disappeared, he said. He and other biologists are still trying to understand what happened, what’s killing them and what the solutions might be. 

Pavlik said it’s likely a combination of reasons, including habitat loss. 

“Habitat loss historically is a huge one,” he said. “The species requires tall grass prairies and prairie fens here in Michigan.” Prairie fens are rare and unique grassy wetlands that are fed by groundwater instead of creeks or streams. 

“Over 99% of that habitat is gone,” he said. 

Additionally, he said widespread aerial spraying of insecticides has affected the last remaining strongholds of the butterflies, and climate change is probably contributing as well. 

“The species overwinters as a caterpillar, and so they can be especially susceptible to changes in winter climate,” he said. 

Adding to the difficulty, the butterfly disappeared so quickly researchers weren’t sure what exactly they need to survive, including what plants they feed on.

Learning what the Poweshiek skipperling eats

“They seem to have two major nectar sources,” Pavlik said, referring to the flowers adult butterflies feed on. 

“And that’s black-eyed Susan – which seems to be their favorite – and then shrubby cinquefoil,” another relatively common yellow prairie flower, he said.

The butterfly’s caterpillars, on the other hand, have been found on prairie dropseed, a fairly common prairie grass, and on a rarer grass called mat muhly. Both occur in high-quality native prairies and in prairie fens.

When biologists realized how precipitously the Poweshiek skipperling was declining, they convened a meeting of researchers and conservation partners, said Tam Smith, a biologist with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the national recovery lead for the butterfly.

The experts at the meeting “recognized that (the Poweshiek) was going down this spiral of extinction,” Smith said. 

The species was officially listed as federally endangered in 2014. 

In 2022, the agency released a 50-year recovery plan for the butterfly, listing the actions scientists had determined were necessary for its full recovery. The cost for all activities over the five decades was estimated at just over $57 million.

One of the main proposed actions at the meeting was to start a captive breeding program.

Smith said the Minnesota Zoo stepped in first to start rearing the butterflies in captivity, using eggs that had been collected from females in Michigan. 

But with so much uncertainty about the basic biology of the species, it was difficult going at first – they quickly found out how sensitive the species was to temperature and humidity, Smith said. 

“One of the first years they started, the temperature was off,” Smith said. That caused the caterpillars to develop too quickly. But then the attempts were more successful.

Later a zoo in Canada, Assiniboine Park Zoo in Winnipeg, joined the effort, and a few years after that John Ball Zoo in Grand Rapids, Michigan, helped as well, Smith said.  

Rearing baby butterflies at John Ball Zoo

“Our prairie butterfly program here at the zoo has just grown enormously since 2020,” said Bill Flanagan, the conservation director at John Ball Zoo. 

The goal is to “make lots of baby Poweshieks so we can do releases and bolster those wild populations to the point where we can start to do reintroductions and start to recover the species,” Flanagan said.

The first caterpillars arrived in 2021 from the Minnesota Zoo, he said.

“We turned 32 caterpillars into somewhere in the neighborhood of 150 caterpillars” the next year, Flanagan said. “The next year, (in 2023,) we had something like 500 caterpillars in the program.”

A very close call

It was a close call – in 2022 only nine Poweshieks, the lowest number ever, were observed in the wild in Michigan, Pavlik said. 


David Pavlik, research assistant with Michigan State University, is working with John Ball Zoo to raise Poweshiek skipperlings for release into the wild. Shown here are cages with grasses that hold the caterpillars. (Photo Courtesy, Ruth Thornton/WKTV Contributor)


But given the success of the zoos’ captive rearing programs, biologists were able to release more than 100 butterflies that year, just in the nick of time. 

The following year they saw more butterflies in the wild again. 

In 2023 they had bred enough butterflies to release more than 500, and in 2024 and 2025 more than 1,000 each year. 

Breeding butterflies: a year at John Ball Zoo

With a short flight period of only a few weeks, things get hectic at John Ball Zoo in July when the adult butterflies emerge and start laying eggs. 

“We have one shot,” Pavlik said. “In three weeks we have to do all of the breeding, all of the releases. It’s a pretty crazy time.”

After the adults emerge, biologists pair up a male and female butterfly – first making sure they are compatible genetically – and place them in what they call a “breeding tent,” a sheer cloth-covered square frame about 12 inches to a side. 


Bill Flanagan, conservation director at John Ball Zoo, shows off Poweshiek skipperling breeding cages in front of a hoop house with more caterpillar cages. (Photo Courtesy, Ruth Thornton/WKTV Contributor)


Then “we monitor them throughout the day to see if they do breed,” he said. “And if they do, we’ll release the male into the wild the next day, and then the female gets transferred to an egg laying enclosure, where she’ll lay the eggs that we’ll collect every morning.”

Almost every morning someone from the zoo drives the newly hatched butterflies to southeastern Michigan, a couple hours’ drive away, for release into the wild, Pavlik said. 


Many species fly for a short time only

When people think about butterflies, they often picture the adults they see flying about. But many species fly for only a couple of weeks during the year, including the Poweshiek. 

Each butterfly lives for only about four to six days in the wild, he said. “Most of the year, we’re taking care of the caterpillars.” 

The caterpillars – also called larvae – feed on the host grasses and go through several “instars,” progressive stages where they shed their skin and grow. Eventually they enter what’s called a “diapause” and overwinter, resting head-down on grass blades. 

A spring awakening

When they wake up in the spring, usually around April or May, they resume feeding and go through additional instars before finally turning into the familiar butterflies.

The zoo recreates the natural conditions as best as it can, transferring the caterpillars to a freezer during their diapause stage. 

“When winter comes, we’ll take those caterpillars off of the plant and put them in a very special and highly controlled overwintering chamber where we can control the temperature and the humidity for exactly what the species needs to survive for nearly six months,” Pavlik said. 


David Pavlik and Cinnamon Mittan, a postdoctoral researcher in Sarah Fitzpatrick’s lab, are preparing caterpillars to be placed in the overwintering chambers, located behind them. (Photo Courtesy, Ruth Thornton/WKTV Contributor)


In the spring, when the host plants start growing again, zookeepers bring the caterpillars out of the freezer and put them back on their plants.

“From May until the end of June, we’re taking care of those caterpillars again until they become adult butterflies,” he said. “And then we repeat the cycle all over again.”

Protecting the butterfly’s remaining habitat

“It doesn’t matter how many butterflies we can produce here at the zoo, we could release 5,000,” Pavlik said. “But if the habitat is not there for them, or if the habitat’s been taken over by invasive species, it doesn’t matter how many we release, it’s not going to work.”

He said that’s why the international partnership is so important – various organizations working on different parts of the problem. 

“I don’t think I’ve heard of a butterfly that has this big of a coalition of people working to save it from extinction,” Pavlik said. 

Members include not only federal and state agencies from the U.S. and Canada, but also universities, nonprofit conservation organizations and land managers maintaining and restoring the natural areas the butterfly needs to survive.

In 2024 the researchers attempted the first reintroduction of the butterfly in Michigan at a site where they once occurred, but had disappeared from. 

The site had become overgrown with buckthorn, an invasive woody species that quickly takes over grassy areas, including prairies and prairie fens. 

Nordmeyer said land managers in southeast Michigan had spent five years removing the buckthorn and other invasive species from the area.

Secret locations help the butterflies thrive

The locations where the butterflies still occur and where they are released are kept secret, however, because of incidents in the past few years when people trampled the fragile habitat when the butterflies were flying. 

With such low population numbers, Smith said, any trampling of eggs or caterpillars, or chasing away the adult butterflies, could be devastating for the species. 



Cale Nordmeyer with the Minnesota Zoo releases Poweshiek skipperlings in an undisclosed location in southeast Michigan in 2024. (Video Courtesy, Ruth Thornton/WKTV Contributor)



Signs of a larger problem?

The decline of the butterflies is a warning sign that the natural areas it occurs in could be in trouble. 

“It’s a really good indicator species,” Pavlik said. “When we see these declines happening for a butterfly so quickly, we know that whatever is affecting that species is probably affecting a lot of other species.”

“It’s important to know that it’s not just Poweshieks,” he said. “Pollinator and insect declines are happening very quickly worldwide.” 

A promising recovery amid an uncertain future

“If you plant native pollinator gardens in your yard, you’ll be helping so many other species. And don’t spray pesticides,” Pavlik said. “Those are two of the biggest things you can do to have a positive impact for pollinators across the world.”

While the Poweshiek skipperling is not out of the woods yet, preliminary results from this year’s field season are promising, Nordmeyer said. 

“We were able to confirm survivorship of last year’s offspring at the (reintroduction) site,” he wrote in an email. 

The situation for Poweshieks is still dire, he said, but this year biologists saw more butterflies than in recent years, and a similar number as before the 2013 population crash. 

“It’s too early to declare victory,” he said, but thanks to the hard work of the partnership working together to breed the butterfly and restore its habitat, “the downward trend of the Poweshiek skipperling is tangibly reversing.”