Butterflies
This reading profile brings together 5 source-linked articles that reference butterflies.
Fauna does not yet have a full sourced identification profile for this name, so this page keeps the relevant reading together without inventing missing species detail.Source-linked reading
- Field guideWhy butterflies taste with their feetButterfly feet carry contact chemosensilla: tiny porous hairs whose receptor neurons respond when dissolved molecules touch them. For females, that first taste can determine whether a leaf is a suitable nursery for caterpillars.
- Field guideHow insect metamorphosis worksMetamorphosis is not one butterfly trick. Insects follow several developmental patterns, and the immature stage may live in a different habitat, eat different food, or resemble the adult to very different degrees.
- Field guideWatching a pollinator gardenThe useful question is not only which pollinators visit, but which flowers they use, when they arrive, and what they do. A fixed patch and a fixed watch turn garden traffic into comparable observations.
- Field guideHow pollination worksPollination moves pollen to a receptive reproductive surface; fertilization may follow if the pollen is compatible and completes later steps. Wind, water, and animals can act as vectors, and effectiveness depends on where pollen is placed and where it goes next.
- Identification guideMonarch or viceroy?One black line across the hindwing usually separates these two orange butterflies.