For weeks now, we've seen them flutter by in flocks and in small groups. Orange and black wisps of shimmering wings, heading north. One lazy, sunny afternoon, Ron and I sat in chairs under shade trees, sipping ice water, admiring our rose garden, waving to neighbors and watching the butterflies migrating for the summer.
Today from Live Science....
Heavy winter rains have led to billions of butterflies that are beginning to descend on California in what could be a record migration.Millions of butterflies that flew into the Central Valley in the last week of March could be just the advance guard of an unprecedented hoard.
"This may be the biggest migration of modern times," said Arthur Shapiro, a professor and expert on butterflies at the University of California, Davis.
There are now reports of billions of painted lady butterflies around Trona, near Death Valley, and in the San Fernando Valley, Shapiro said. More waves of butterflies are likely to appear in central California over the next few weeks.
Painted lady butterflies (Vanessa cardui) winter in the desert. As caterpillars turn into adults in the spring, they migrate north in search of food and a place to mate.
Painted ladies migrate every year, but usually in far fewer numbers. Exceptionally high winter rainfall in southern California has created a bumper crop of plants on which the caterpillars feed, Shapiro said.
The butterflies take about three days to reach the Central Valley. Some will fly on to southern Oregon to mate. Their offspring head up to British Columbia by summer, before returning south again in the fall.
Ron goes back to work on Monday after a two-month lay-off. I will miss having him at home. We have such peace just watching butterflies drift by in the breezes.....
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