Nebraskaland

NEBRASKAland April 2015

NEBRASKAland Magazine is dedicated to outstanding photography and informative writing with an engaging mix of articles and photos highlighting Nebraska’s outdoor activities, parklands, wildlife, history and people.

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36 NEBRASKAland • APRIL 2015 Raising Monarchs A School Project Turned to a Passion E ach year, millions of school children learn about one of the amazing feats of the natural world – metamorphosis – with the help of one of America's best known insects: the monarch butterfly. Shauna Groenewold's interest in monarchs started on that same front 20 years ago when she helped her daughter, Kalyn, raise them from egg to caterpillar to butterfly for a science fair project. "I initially discovered how easy it was, and it was fun. I enjoyed it. So I just kept doing it," she said. Like frogs and salamanders, butterflies became another on the list of "weird pets" for the mother and daughter who were allergic to pet dander. And that's how Groenewold describes raising them. "It's sort of like taking care of any other pet." she said, "except not as demanding." Feeding monarchs requires milkweed, and lots of it. Without a ready supply, you won't be able to support the larvae. Groenewold and her husband, Mike, a horticulturist, have plenty of milkweed and other pollinator- friendly plants in their flower garden, which is certified as a Monarch Waystation though MonarchWatch.org. The Groenewolds grow swamp, butterfly and common milkweed. "Some people don't like common milkweed because it's been associated with weeds," she said. "But more and more people are incorporating it in their landscape because they realize it has really pretty flowers and it's so fragrant." Groenewold usually finds her first monarch egg in May when her milkweed plants are only 3 inches tall. While monarchs have few predators, rearing them in captivity does increase their likelihood of survival. But Groenewold, who has reared as many as 58 monarchs in a single year, doesn't expect her work to make a difference in the continental population on that front. Raising awareness of the species decline and its habitat needs, however, might. So she speaks to garden groups and others, and takes adult butterflies to work and gives them to coworkers so their children can release them. And for the past two summers she has participated in a nationwide tagging program through Monarch Watch and put small stickers on about 30 monarchs she has either reared or caught in her yard. She hasn't had a tag recovered in Mexico yet, but knows the odds are long since there are millions that make the journey and only 1 percent of all tags are recovered. "I'm hopeful," she said. ■ Shauna Groenewold clips a leaf from a milkweed plant on which a monarch butterfly laid an egg in her backyard butterfly garden in Lincoln. The egg laden leaf is placed in plastic container to hatch. Monarch eggs are nearly small enough to fit through the eye of a needle.

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