Hungry, Hungry Caterpillars

Blog Category
Discover Nature Notes
Published Display Date
May 30, 2016
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The bright wings of butterflies catch your eyes. Many people notice butterflies, but few notice typically drab caterpillars.

Butterflies find mates, reproduce and die. Caterpillars have much bigger jobs. They hatch from tiny eggs to grow into fat, fleshy larvae. Then they transform into graceful adults. All that takes lots of energy. So caterpillars are eating machines.

Most caterpillars only eat the leaves of certain plants. Monarch caterpillars eat milkweeds. Monarch butterflies check each plant to make sure it is a milkweed before laying eggs on it. This ensures that their young have the right food available upon hatching. Regal fritillary caterpillars eat violet leaves. Regal fritillary butterflies lay their eggs in areas where violets are likely to grow and trust that their young will inch their way to violet plants.

From Caterpillar to Butterfly

  • Monarch larvae feed on a variety of milkweeds, which contain cardiac glycosides. These chemicals are stored in the insect’s body and render it unpalatable and toxic to many predators.
  • The bright color patterns of both Monarch larvae and adults advertise their toxicity to would-be predators. As adults, monarchs consume the nectar of a wide variety of flowers, particularly New England aster and other members of the sunflower family.
  • Broods are produced in Missouri in summer and fall. Adults migrate to Mexico in late summer and fall; then, when they fly north in spring, they reproduce in Oklahoma or Texas. Their offspring continue northward, returning “home” some generations later.
  • Eggs are laid in the spring and summer and hatch in about four days. The caterpillars eat milkweed. After about two weeks, the caterpillar enters the chrysalis stage. The mature butterfly emerges in about two weeks.

For more on Monarch caterpillars and butterflies, visit the MDC’s Field Guide.

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