Cenizo Journal Summer 2010 | Page 27

nicates with the one in its brain to keep the Monarch on its migratory path. Reppert’s team experiment- ed on the Monarch’s antennae in three ways. First, they surgi- cally removed the antennae to determine that this disabled the butterfly’s navigational ability altogether. Second, they dipped the antennae in black paint and discovered that the butterfly could not navigate. Last, they covered the antennae with clear paint and found that the butterfly could fly where it intended. This description might sound like a simple experiment any high school student could try, but Reppert and his scien- tists are cutting edge. They are mapping the Monarch’s genome. The Monarchs’ bi-annual migration is an unfolding mys- tery. We now understand that their sense of direction is an interaction between their two clocks and their sun compass. And we comprehend generally that they know where to win- ter-over because this inherited behavior is embedded in their genetic chemistry. But we don’t know how it works. Until the mid-70s we didn’t know where the eastern Monarchs were going every fall. AT LAST, THE WINTER COLONY As early as 1857, entomolo- gists, beginning with the Cana - dian W.S.M. D’Urban, began to make notes about the Monarch: “such vast numbers as to darken the air by clouds of them.” C.V. Riley, Missouri’s first state entomologist, suggested in 1878 that Monarchs migrated like birds. “Almost past belief... mil- lions is but feebly expressive ... miles of them is no exaggera- tion,” is how J. Hamilton described the Monarch migra- tion at Brigantine, New Jersey in the fall of 1885. Ancient peoples in Mexico have known for millennia where the Monarchs spend their winters. The indigenous Mazahua speak of the Monarch as seperito, “the but- terfly that passes in October and November.” The winter Monarch colonies were a long kept secret amongst the forest people. In the late 1930s Frederick Urquhart, a Canadian biolo- gist, and his wife Norah began to tag Monarchs. By 1972 they knew that the Monarchs fol- lowed a northeast to southwest migration pattern. Norah placed notices in Mexican newspapers asking for volun- teers to tag the butterflies. Another husband and wife team, Ken and Catalina (Cathy) Brugger, living in Mexi - co, undertook the Urquhart’s challenge. They tracked the butterflies in and around the plains and mountains of east- ern Michoacan. Though they felt they were getting closer to uncovering the secret, their trail kept running cold. Near the vil- lage of Donata Guerra an older man agreed to show them where the butterflies con- gregated. They were led 10,000 feet high first to a colony of millions on Cerro Pelon and then to another one on Cerro Chincua. When the sun shown through the clouds whole colonies of Monarchs lifted into the air. Color-blind, Ken Brugger missed the fire- works but witnessed the experi- ence of his life. The Urquharts arrived the following year in 1976 to real- ize their dream and climbed the butterfly mountain. They found a Monarch wearing one of the little gummed tags that had been issued to a volunteer. The tag read: “Send back to the University of Toronto Zoology.” Later that year, the Urqu - harts released their scientific discovery in the August issue of National Geographic. “Found At Last: The Mon archs’ Winter Home,” the article triumphant- ly announced. Urquhart added this poetic description to the annals of Monarch history: They “filled the air with their sun-shot wings, shimmering against the blue mountain sky and drifting across our vision in blizzard flakes of orange and black.” This announcement marked the beginning of a new chapter in the story of the Monarch that includes the conservation of the butterfly’s winter habitat, flyway and summer breeding grounds. The work of tagging the Monarch has expanded and is now presided over by Dr. Orley R. “Chip” Taylor at Monarch Watch, a citizen’s sci- entist effort to collect data for research. Follow the Monarch at www.learner.org/jnorth/Monarch/ Read Eduardo Rendon at www.worldwildlife.org/species/find er/Monarchbutterflies/Monarchbutt erflies.html and learn more from the North American Butterfly Association: www.naba.org Alpine Community Credit Union Credit Union members are not our customers, you are the owners of the Credit Union. We’re locally owned by our members, who must live or work in Alpine. We know you. We know your needs. 111 N 2nd Street • Alpine 432.837.5156 READ US ONLINE! www.cenizojournal.com D AVIS M OUNTAINS N UT C OMPANY Roasted and Dipped Pecans You can taste the difference care makes! Please stop in for FREE SAMPLES Hwy 17 in Fort Davis • Open: Mon. - Sat. 9 to 5 Great handmade gourmet gifts! Visit us on the web: www.allpecans.com 800-895-2101 • 432-426-2101 [email protected] Cenizo Third Quarter 2010 27