Butterflies use magnetic compass to fly across America
By James Morgan Science reporter, BBC News
The monarch butterfly uses a magnetic compass to guide its extraordinary migration thousands of km across North America, scientists say. Monarchs are known to possess a Sun compass but even on cloudy days they still keep flying south towards Mexico.
In a laboratory experiment, butterflies changed direction when the magnetic field around them was altered.
It suggests that like turtles and birds the insects have a geomagnetic compass, says a study in Nature Communications. It raises concerns the butterflies may be disturbed by human-induced magnetic "noise" - which can apparently disrupt the European robin, a migratory bird. The North American monarch butterfly Danaus plexippus is famous for its epic journey from Canada to Mexico.
Every Autumn, despite never having flown more than a few hundred metres, millions of the insects set off across Lake Erie and head south for the warmer forests of the Michoacan mountains.
There they spend the winter - coating the trees in an amazing
display which attracts thousands of tourists.The ancient Mayans believed the butterflies were the souls of the dead, and the insect has become a symbol of North American trade and cooperation.
"This is a marvellous piece of biology. It's like a work of art. It's inspiring and it can teach us important things about migrating animals," said Prof Steven Reppert of University of Massachusetts Medical School.
For years his team have been trying to solve the puzzle of how the butterflies maintain their direction towards the equator. Previously they found the butterflies could calculate the position of the Sun via light-sensitive molecules in their antennae.
By combining this with their inbuilt biological clock, they create a time-compensated Sun compass.
But even under thick cloud cover, the insects do not lose their way - hinting at an additional, magnetic compass.
Monarch butterflies Fewer and fewer monarchs are arriving in Mexico
To test for this, the scientists strapped butterflies into a flight simulator, allowing them to point in any direction while flying "on the spot". They surrounded the chamber with a magnetic coil system and varied the inclination angle of poles.
2
The monarchs responded by turning in the direction they perceived as south.
Crucially - the magnetic compass only worked when the butterflies were also exposed to light in the ultraviolet-A/blue range. This was not present in previous magnetic experiments with monarchs - explaining why they failed to find evidence of such a compass, the researchers believe.
"To our knowledge, this is the first demonstration of the use of an inclination magnetic compass by a long-distance migratory insect," said Prof Reppert.
Come enjoy our new M.G. Nelson Foundation Butterfly Garden!