Considering a Butterfly Release?
There's No Need to Release Butterflies -- They're
Already Free
by Jeffrey
Glassberg (president of
NABA); Paul Opler (author of
Peterson Field Guide to Eastern Butterflies);
Robert M. Pyle (author of Audubon
Society Field Guide to Butterflies); Robert
Robbins (curator of Lepidoptera, Smithsonian
Institution) and James Tuttle (president,
(Lepidopterists' Society) Reprinted with permission.
Most fifth graders can tell you how the magnificent
Monarch butterflies migrate thousands of miles every
autumn from the United States and Canada to a few
small mountain tops in Mexico. There they find the
right environmental conditions that allow them to
survive the winter. With the advent of spring, they
begin their return journey. This migratory
phenomenon is truly a wonder of nature that sparks
the imagination.
Now imagine tens of
thousands of mixed-up Monarchs unable to find the
way to their overwintering grounds. This depressing
image may become a reality if the rapidly-growing
fad of releasing butterflies, including Monarch
butterflies, at weddings, state fairs, and other
public events continues to spread. Because the
released Monarchs may have come from California, for
instance, where they do not migrate to Mexico, their
offspring may not be able to orient properly,.
Because the Monarchs were raised inside under
unnatural conditions, it is possible that their
delicate migratory physiology may not have been
turned on.
Public interest in
butterflies is increasing dramatically. We hope and
expect this greater involvement with butterflies
will eventually lead to much-needed support for
butterfly conservation and studies, but the release
of live butterflies is the dark side of this
increase in popularity. Although this practice is
understandable to naive newlyweds-to-be (what could
be more beautiful than adding butterflies to the
environment?) it is really a particularly
long-lasting form of environmental pollution.
Butterflies raised
by unregulated commercial interests may spread
diseases and parasites to wild populations, with
devastating results. Often, butterflies are released
great distances from their points of origin,
resulting in inappropriate genetic mixing of
different populations when the same species is
locally present. When it is not, a non-native
species is being introduced in the area of release.
At best, this confuses studies of butterfly
distribution and migration; at worst, it may result
in deleterious changes to the local ecology. The
Hollywood Jurassic park message, "Don't fool with
Mother Nature," has scientific foundations. Recently
a high profile report in Science magazine found that
even the careful introduction of species for
biological control often causes unexpected negative
results.
In addition, these
releases create a commercial market for live
butterflies (currently about $10/apiece), with the
result that, for example, the Monarch overwintering
sites in Mexico and on the California coast are now
targets for poachers.
Currently, the
interstate shipment of live butterflies requires a
permit from the U.S. Department of Agriculture but
this law is not usually enforced. In general, the
Dept. of Agriculture may issue a permit for shipping
any of the following species: Monarch, Painted Lady,
American Lady, Red Admiral, Giant Swallowtail, Gulf
Fritillary, Zebra (Heliconian), and Mourning Cloak.
Shipping Red Admirals, Giant Swallowtails, Gulf
Fritillaries and Zebra (Heliconians) is particularly
inappropriate because they are not naturally found
over much of the United States.
A solution that
better serves the public interest with less
regulatory burden is to ban the environmental
release of commercially-obtained butterflies (we
would exempt education institutions, although even
here we would encourage schools to keep
commercially-obtained butterflies within the
confines of the school). The intentional release of
native birds was outlawed in 1947. The time has come
to do the same with butterflies.
In addition to the
above, many wedding planners now avoid butterflies
at weddings because they not infrequently arrive
dead, or half-dead. (See the recent article in the
New York Times "Festive Release of Butterflies Puts
Trouble in the Air" on page F4 of the Sept. 15, 1998
edition). Even if alive, they often will soon die
because they are released at the wrong time of year,
or at the wrong locality to survive.
A truly beautiful
and environmentally friendly way to celebrate a
wedding is to throw rose petals. You can even use
outdated roses from your florist.
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