Butterflies Caterpillars Chrysalises FREE
Milkweed Seeds! Paradise Jewelry Home Page
Click here to
Check out
the Super Jewelry Deals Page
- 50% off & Dropping!
Awesome Reverse Auction with over 100 Fine Jewelry Items!
Courtesy of Paradise Jewelry -The Friendliest Store in the World!
|
Monarch Metamorphosis |
| Please drop by my home page
and help me increase traffic - thanks! Click here! |
![]() Butterfly Jewelry |
Click
here to see the Tourmaline Butterflies![]() |
I'm going to try to post pictures of the butterflies alongside their caterpillars and chrysalises. I've been adding some pictures of their eggs lately. I'll keep adding as I'm able to get pictures. Send your questions and I'll add them to the FAQ page. Butterfly FAQ's (Thanks to Ken Werner at Gulf Coast Butterflies (239-353-9492 for all the help!)
|
|
|
|
|
Monarch on Milkweed |
Monarch Caterpillar |
Monarch Chrysalis |
|
|
|
|
|
Queen Butterfly on Wild Ageratum |
Queen Caterpillar on Milkweed |
Queen Chrysalis |
|
|
|
|
|
Viceroy on Willow leaf |
Viceroy Caterpillar on Willow leaf |
Queens mating on Willow |
|
|
|
|
|
Sulphur Butterfly on Pentas |
Sulphur Caterpillar on Cassia - Note |
Sulphur Chrysalis |
|
|
|
|
|
Longwing Zebra |
Longwing Zebra Caterpillars on Passion Vine |
Longwing Zebra Chrysalis |
|
|
|
|
|
Gulf Fritillary Caterpillar on Passion Vine |
Fritillary Chrysalis |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Julia Butterfly |
Julia Caterpillar on Passion Vine |
Julia Chrysalis |
|
Eastern Black Swallowtail on Penta |
|
|
|
Eastern Black Swallowtail Caterpillar on Parsley |
Eastern Black |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Southern White |
Southern White Caterpillar on Mustard |
Southern White Chrysalides ready to hatch |
|
|
|
|
|
Buckeye |
Buckeye Caterpillar on Plantain leaf |
Buckeye Chrysalis |
|
|
|
|
|
Malachite |
Malachite Caterpillar on Blechum |
Malachite Chrysalis |
|
|
|
|
|
White Peacock on Porterweed |
Front view of Swallowtail |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
![]() Full view of a Polydamas. You can see how it looks just like a Swallowtail but without tails. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Male Zebras mating with female chrysalis |
Here is a Sulphur Caterpillar in the middle of becoming a chrysalis |
Thanks to Stuart S. for telling me that this is an Azalea Caterpillar! |
|
![]() |
|
|
Oleander Moth caterpillars on Oleander (They don't sting) (Picture courtesy of Danielle Barker) |
Here is a cool picture sent to me by Nancy Eaton. It has a Polydamas butterfly, caterpillar and chrysalis all in the same picture! |
Does anyone what kind of moth this caterpillar turns into? Photo by Ellis Fleming I'm told that this is a Tersa Sphinx Moth of the Hawk Moth family and feeds on Pentas as a host plant |
![]() |
![]() |
Hickory Horned Devil Caterpillar. It will
become a Regal Moth (Royal Walnut Moth) -Thanks to Sherri Hudson! http://www.hilarynelson.com/Hobbies/ Bugs/HickoryHornedDevilCaterpillar/ |
|
Oleander Moth - it looks like a wasp, but it's harmless! (Photo courtesy of Kevin - thanks!) |
Hickory Horned Devil Caterpillar. It will become a Regal Moth (Royal Walnut Moth) |
Click here to see more Mystery Caterpillars |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Butterfly (and caterpillar) Predators Birds and wasps are the most effective predators. Here are some pictures as I get them.
|
|
|
|
|
Ants will eat eggs and sometimes attack butterflies and caterpillars |
Walking Sticks are the enemies of butterflies |
Assassin Bug - This bug sucks the juice out of caterpillars |
|
|
|
|
|
Wasps and Yellow Jackets love caterpillars |
Ladybugs don't only eat aphids |
This is a Leaf Footed Bug (of the stinkbug family.
(Thanks Pam!) |
![]() These are little tiny parasitic wasps, they look a lot like fruit flies. They lay their eggs in the chrysalis. When the eggs hatch the wasp larvae eat it and kill it. |
![]() This is a Milkweed bug. The little ones are juveniles. They are harmless to caterpillars, what they eat are the Milkweed seeds. |
If you are interested in Butterfly Gardening, here are some
plants that are great for attracting butterflies. Keep in mind that you
need two kinds of plants for a good turnout in your butterfly garden, nectar
plants that serve to feed the adult butterflies, and larval food plants
that they can lay their eggs on for the caterpillars to eat when they
hatch. If you give them both of these types of plants, they can raise
their families right in your yard and never have to leave! Butterfly
Plants. Free
Milkweed seeds
Larval Food Plants:
Milkweed: Monarchs and
Queens
Passion Vine: Zebras, Fritillaries, and Julias
Parsley & Dill Swallowtails
Pipevine
Polydamas & Pipevine Swallowtails
Cassia:
Yellow Sulphurs (all different kinds)
Willow: Viceroys
Mustard Southern Whites
Plumbago Hairstreaks
Plantain
Buckeye
Climbing Aster Pearl Crescent
Nectar Plants: Pentas,
Porterweed, Ageratum, and Mexican Flame Vine do best in my yard.
Hummingbirds will also use these, so you get the best of both worlds!
Buddleia (Butterfly Bush) is great and so is Scorpiontail.
I will be adding more information as I am able.
Good Books on Butterflies:
Florida's Fabulous Butterflies (includes special chapter on moths)
- Emmel/Kenney
Butterfly Book, The Complete Guide to Butterfly Gardening, Identification, and
Behavior - Stokes & Williams
National Audubon Society Field Guide to North American Butterflies - Knopf
Some Great Butterfly Links:
More Butterfly Links
YouTube - How To Repair a
Monarch's Wing - NEAT!
Live Monarch - Butterfly Site
Butterfly Zone -
At the Bronx Zoo
Naples Butterfly.com
Butterfly Conservation
Butterflies of Europe
Schmetterlinge
Butterfly Page
Captain's European Butterfly
Guide
Butterflies
of Hawaii
The Milkweed Farm
Monarch Watch
North American Butterfly
Association
Monarch
Monitoring Project
Butterfly &
Nature Gift Store
The Butterfly Site.com - Butterfly info
Free
Wallpaper Site - Animals & Butterflies
Butterfly
Pictures
Butterfly House
- Whitehouse, Ohio
Photos
of butterflies & caterpillars
Milkweed
bug info
The Butterfly Palace in Branson Missouri
Butterfly Art -
Butterfly Art brings you a wide variety of mounted butterfly designs made
from some of the rarest and most stunning butterflies found in South America!
Here's a cool butterfly story from Mark K.:
As a kid, I discovered a wild milkweed garden near my home in Carmichael, CA and
my fascination with the monarch butterfly was gestated. I took some caterpillars
home in a shoebox (I wouldn't do this now) and brought them fresh milkweed as
needed. These caterpillars spun cocoons in my bedroom - from the roof, shelves,
window seal, etc. To my and my family's amazement, the butterfly's hatched
eventually and I would find them flying around in my room when I came home from
school. I then successfully released them into the outside
environment. I love these butterflies and wouldn't attempt to remove them
from the natural environment now, but I've wanted to plant some milkweed for
quite some time now. I'd love to have some of your free milkweed seeds if
you have any left. I can send a self-addressed stamped envelope if
necessary. Thanks.
Sincerely,
Mark K.
Butterfly Questions:
Why are they not hatching?
My caterpillars are growing and getting big and fat, but then the chrysalis
is not completing its work. The Monarchs are getting all the way to the point
where they are starting to turn black and then its all over.
I had a couple of Fritillaries start to hang, get a little milky white and then
went no further.
Could it be all this rain? It seemed in the spring they were hatching like
crazy. Now nothing. I finally had 2 Monarchs and a Black Swallowtail hatch
today.
Thanks
Jill
Hi Jill!
I don't know a lot about what adversely affects caterpillars and chrysalides,
but it sounds like they are either getting sick, or becoming the victims of
parasites.
I've had that happen to mine before too. If you spot a chrysalis that has gone
all black, destroy it so the parasite or disease will not be able to continue on
to affect others.
I've noticed the same problem with my butterfly population after the season got
off to a good start. I suspect that a season with a LOT of butterflies gives the
parasitic predators and diseases a good population to work on and they suddenly
increase.
The good news is that nothing stops butterflies for long. They will return next
season as always. In Nature's cycle, if all the butterflies died, then the
parasites and diseases would all die too. Just as the plants grow back after the
caterpillars eat them to nubs, so the butterfly population rebounds after a
problem.
|
Ordering
Disclosure
Return To Main Menu
Paradise Jewelry
The Friendliest Store In The World!
5455 Airport Rd. North
Naples, FL 34109
Toll Free 877-591-2645
Copyright 2000, 2001
E-mail me at