Nature’s Delicate Tightrope Walk
We still have not fully understood the intricacies
of working of nature. We fiddle with it sometimes with good intentions but end
up getting counterproductive results. Here is an example of how overzealous
conservation efforts drove a species of butterfly, Large Blue Butterflies’ (Maculinea
arion), to extinction in UK but was brought back from the brink after
careful study and understanding of the ecosystem processes. The whole scenario
was the culmination of 40-year research effort by Dr Jeremy Thomas of the
University of Oxford in Oxford, UK.
The butterflies disappeared from Britain in 1979. Butterfly
collectors were generally blamed for the decline of this butterfly. This was
far from the truth. The study throws light on how the large blue butterflies’ dependence
on a single species of ant led to the butterflies' disappearance.
Adult females of Large Blue butterflies lay their
eggs on Thyme flowers in the summer. The
caterpillars secrete chemicals that attract red ants and fool them into
thinking the caterpillars are ant grubs. The ants carry the caterpillars into
their underground nests. Caterpillars that have been taken to the nest of one
particular ant species, Myrmica sabuleti, will survive to adulthood. The caterpillars' secretions are a close match
to those of M. sabuleti grubs. Ants never discover that they have been
fooled, and continue to protect the caterpillars for 10 months even though they
feed on the ants' own brood. In early June, the caterpillars form a chrysalis
and crawl above ground. Two weeks later they become full-fledged butterflies.
In their overzealous attitude to conservation the
authorities initially fenced off the habitat of the butterflies to prevent entry
and give total protection to the butterflies. The scientists soon realized that
the grass in the butterflies' habitat had grown too long, as grazing had been completely
stopped with the formation of fences. The soil characteristics also changed. It
was now too cool to support adequate numbers of M. sabuleti ants. Without
enough ants to raise their young, the large blue butterflies dwindled.
In the late 1970s, after 40 years of trying to save
the large blue by preventing entry of butterfly collectors, conservationists
followed Dr Thomas' recommendations, They restored the butterfly' habitat by
clearing scrub and reintroducing grazing animals. Grazing was intimately
associated with the ecological processes.
Starting in 1983, Thomas and his colleagues began
introducing large blue butterflies imported from Sweden, into the restored habitat.
The butterflies started establishing. The butterflies now occupy 30 percent
more colonies than they had in the 1950s. The large blue is now one of three
butterflies on course to meet the Convention of Biological Diversity's target
to reverse species' declines by 2010. In
the 1970s, the International Union for Conservation of Nature selected three
butterflies, the Large Blue, Queen Alexandra's Birdwing of Papua New Guinea and
the monarch butterfly of North America as
global flagships for the cause of lepidopteran conservation.
The research paper is entitled, "Successful Conservation of a Threatened Maculinea Butterfly." It is slated to appear in Science, at the Science Express website, on 18 June 2009.
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