- Bug Photography, bug art, bug science...Bug Wonder!
-
"...mysterious and little known organisms live within walking distance of where you sit. Splendor awaits in minute proportions.”
E.O. Wilson (Biophilia) Copyright
© Adrian Thysse and Splendour Awaits. Scroll down for full copyright notice.Alberta Photography
Follow Me
Support this blog by ordering here!
B&H Search Engine Banner Broken Links? Errors? Goof-ups?
Please contact me!Go ahead, search me…
Need Bug ID?
Help support this site!
Top Posts & Pages
-
Commentarium
- Adrian on The Week on Sunday #31
- Ted C. MacRae on The Week on Sunday #31
- Adrian on Free eBooks by Jean-Henri Fabre.
- Joanna on Free eBooks by Jean-Henri Fabre.
- Sean McCann on Colin Hutton – The Missing Image
- Adrian on From the Funnel’s Mouth
- Sean McCann on From the Funnel’s Mouth
- Adrian on All eyes, no head…
- biobabbler on All eyes, no head…
- Adrian on All eyes, no head…
NatureBlog Network
All Canadian BugBlogs
Biodiversity
BugBlogs
- 6legs2many
- Adventures Among Ants
- Am I Bugging You Yet?
- American Beetles
- Anna’s Bee World
- AntBlog
- Arizona Writer
- Arizona: Beetles, Bugs…
- Arthropoda
- Backyard Arthropod Project
- Beastiary
- Beetle Blog
- Beetles in the Bush
- Bug Eric
- Bug Safari
- Bug Shots
- Bug Squad
- Bug Tracks
- BugBlog
- Bugman Jones
- Bunyipco
- Butterflies of Singapore
- Caterpillar Blog
- cicindela
- Coleoptrist’s Corner
- Compound Eye
- Crooked Beak Workshop
- Endless Swarm
- Entomoblog
- Fly Obsession
- Gossamer Tapestry
- Honeybee Suite
- Insect Tour (Hebrew)
- Insect, Macro and Wildlife Images
- Insects did it first
- Invertebrate Diaries
- Itsy Bitsy Beetle
- J.C. Abbott Nature Photography
- J.J.'s Photographic
- Laurie Knight
- Lep Log
- Liewwk Nature Photography
- Life on Six Legs
- Living With Insects
- Lyman Entomological Museum
- Macrocritters
- makrofokus (Swedish)
- Matt Cole Wildlife Photography
- MoBugs
- Moose Pasture – Biodiversity in Sub-boreal Alberta
- Myrmecos
- Nature Closeups
- Nature Diary
- Nature’s Place
- No Cropping Zone
- Normal Biology
- Northwest Dragonflyer
- Pencil and Leaf
- Pterostichini
- Rainforests
- Scottyphotography
- Tales From the Butterfly Garden
- Teaching Biology
- The Atavism
- The Bug Chicks
- The Bugs of Booger County
- The Dragonfly Whisperer
- The Dragonfly Woman
- The Entomologist
- The Hope Entomological Museum
- The Insect Museum
- The Pace of Nature
- The Sam Wells Bug Page
- The Skeptical Moth
- The Smaller Majority
- They Go "Crunch"
- Things Biological
- Up Close with Nature
- Urban Dragon Hunters
- Wild About Ants
- Wild Light
- Winged Beauty
Conservation
Evolution
Garden
Macro
Microscopy
Nature Alberta Blogs
Nature Photography
Other Small Things
Prairie Posts
Reason
Science
Web o' Mine
Websites
Archive
Follow Me
-
Previous Posts
COPYRIGHT NOTICE
© Adrian Thysse and Splendour Awaits, 2011/2012. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express permission from this blog’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to Adrian Thysse and 'Splendour Awaits', with appropriate and specific direction to the original content.
DISCLAIMER
I am a photographer, not an entomologist. I do my best to have professionals assist in identifying the subjects of my photographs. However, positive identifications can not always be done unless the specimen is dead and viewed under a microscope. If you do find an error, or have doubts about the identification provided, please let me know in the comments or by email.
Tag Archives: Mormon
Early Spring Decreases Populations of Mormon Fritillary
A press release at the National Science Foundation indicates that climate change is affecting the population of Mormon Fritillaries, Speyeria mormonia.

A Mormon Fritillary butterfly feeding on an aspen fleabane daisy, a main nectar source. Credit: Carol Boggs
“Early snowmelt caused by climate change in the Colorado Rocky Mountains snowballs into two chains of events: a decrease in the number of flowers, which, in turn, decreases available nectar. The result is decline in a population of the Mormon Fritillary butterfly, Speyeria mormonia.
Using long-term data on date of snowmelt, butterfly population sizes and flower numbers at the Rocky Mountain Biological Laboratory, Carol Boggs, a biologist at Stanford University, and colleagues uncovered multiple effects of early snowmelt on the growth rate of an insect population.
“Predicting effects of climate change on organisms’ population sizes will be difficult in some cases due to lack of knowledge of the species’ biology,” said Boggs, lead author of a paper reporting the results online in this week’s journal Ecology Letters.
Taking into account the butterfly’s life cycle and the factors determining egg production was important to the research.
A Mormon Fritillary caterpillar on violet; plants in this genus are eaten by the caterpillars. Credit: Carol Boggs
Butterflies lay eggs (then die) in their first summer; the caterpillars from those eggs over-winter without eating and develop into adults in the second summer.
In laboratory experiments, the amount of nectar a female butterfly ate determined the number of eggs she laid. This suggested that flower availability might be important to changes in population size.
Early snowmelt in the first year leads to lower availability of the butterfly’s preferred flower species, a result of newly developing plants being exposed to early-season frosts that kill flower buds.
The ecologists showed that reduced flower–and therefore nectar–availability per butterfly adversely affected butterfly population growth rate.”
Read the rest of the press release at Early Spring Drives Butterfly Population Declines.
Boggs, C. L. and Inouye, D. W. (2012), A single climate driver has direct and indirect effects on insect population dynamics. Ecology Letters. doi: 10.1111/j.1461-0248.2012.01766.x
Related articles
- Extreme weather baffles British butterflies (guardian.co.uk)
- Global warming: Early snowmelt hits Colorado butterflies (summitcountyvoice.com)










