Link to Home

Did You Know?

Some butterflies are very specific about where they lay their eggs. Monarchs will only lay their eggs on milkweeds. Milkweeds contain a potent heart poison, which helps to protect them from browsing animals and leaf-eating insects such grasshoppers. Monarchs are able to store this poison within their own bodies, making themselves poisonous in turn. They are very brightly colored, both as a caterpillar and as an adult, to advertise that they are not good to eat. Great Plains Nature Center

Please support our conservation efforts!
Loading

Monarch Butterfly

Date Submitted: June 15, 2010

Observer: Paul Lauenstein

Observation Date: 5/26/10

Observation Time: 5:10 p.m.

Observation Location: Gavins Pond

Plant or Animal? Animal

Common Name: Monarch Butterfly

Scientific Name: Danaus plexippus

Monarch Butterfly

Comments: None

More Information: Great Plains Nature Center

Previous, Subsequent, or Similar Sightings:
Juvenal's Duskywing, 5/23/10
Viceroy Butterfly, 5/23/10
Tiger Swallowtail, 5/30/10
Pearl Crescent butterfly, 5/30/10
Little Wood Satyr butterfly, 6/20/10
Large Yellow Underwing moth, 6/22/10
Indian Skipper Butterfly, 7/19/10
Peck's Skipper Butterfly, 8/4/10
Red Admiral Butterfly, 5/7/11

Back to the Sightings List