Tuesday, June 5, 2012

6.5.12



We don't typically touch our Monarch caterpillars (my four-year-old was dying to know what they felt like!), we most frequently just move the leaf that the caterpillar is chomping on, or we use a wet tipped 1/2" paint brush to move our caterpillars when daily cleaning out their habitat.


{FINDINGS}
0 eggs
0 caterpillars

{EGGS WAITING TO HATCH}
0

{HATCHLINGS}
0

{NURSERY GUESTS}
0

{CATERPILLARS}
37 Total
11 large
16 medium
9 small

{CHRYSALIS}
14

{MONARCH's}
0


***I'm THRILLED to have 14 chrysalis's and 4-6 more getting ready to change tomorrow!  Ah-mazing!

***Another caterpillar died today.  I'm pretty sure this one was also bit to death.  Sad.  So far we have a 50/53 survival rate, still MUCH higher than the 10% survival rate in the 'wild!'

Monday, June 4, 2012

6.4.12


After caring for Monarch caterpillars for a couple of weeks, it is incredible to watch the hard work (well, not exactly hard work, just constant care & attention) pay off --- and watching the caterpillars change, one by one, into the Pupa stage!




{FINDINGS}
0 eggs
0 caterpillars

{EGGS WAITING TO HATCH}
0

{HATCHLINGS}
0

{NURSERY GUESTS}
0

{CATERPILLARS}
44 Total
18 large
16 medium
10 small

{CHRYSALIS}
7

{MONARCH's}
0

***I'm starting to feel like I need some more eggs... my largest caterpillars are making the great change by the handful these days... it is so exciting!

Sunday, June 3, 2012

6.3.12




Most often, Monarch caterpillars are docile creatures, unless another invades in another's feeding territory. I believe that this is what happened to this caterpillar.  I am assuming that a caterpillars blood is green, just like its feces, because all it consumes are Milkweed leaves.


{FINDINGS}
0 eggs
0 caterpillars

{EGGS WAITING TO HATCH}
0

{HATCHLINGS}
0

{NURSERY GUESTS}
0

{CATERPILLARS}
54 Total
21 large {+/- 9-14 days old}
15 medium {8 days old}
13 small {4 & 6 days old}
4 chrysalis

***I woke up to find one of my larger caterpillars in a pool of his own green blood. I have been seeing a few feisty caterpillars biting at one another if they happen to touch each other while they are eating, and I know that hatchlings can consume each other if they can't find a food source just after hatching - but this was crazy, and sad.

***There are also three more chrysalis' hanging- and I couldn't be more thrilled!  I did miss two of the shedding their skin, but I enjoyed watching the third with my four-and-a-half year old son, and he was just as amazed!



A Chrysalis in the Making

Saturday, June 2, 2012

FIRST Chrysalis!!!

For nine days I have fed and cleaned up after this growing young caterpillar!  Last night I watched as he spun a silky thread and hung upside down in the classic 'J position!'  I figured that I'd wake up to find a chrysalis, but I've learned that 'J position' - chrysalis takes about 18-20 hours.

When the caterpillar first began to wiggle, I noticed that the tip of the caterpillars bum began to seem translucent, and soon the entire caterpillar body began to take on a green tinge.  The body began shaking, similarly to panting, and then the caterpillar began to crunch its body like it was in labor - and since its giving birth to a new form of itself, it seems like an accurate description!  Intermittently, the caterpillar's body would plumpen and contract in segments, looking like a alien might burst from inside. Lastly, before the caterpillar's skin finally spilt, it looked like the caterpillar was wearing a puffer jacket!

It took only a single minute for the caterpillar skin to split open- starting from the head.  After the skin was completely scrunched up at the tip of the tail, the caterpillar then began to fling itself wildly inside the now green pupa.  A few minutes of 'dancing' inside the soft chrysalis, the caterpillar dripped its last caterpillar skin to the ground.

After several hours, the chrysalis continued to wiggle and harden, leaving beautiful markings on the the outside.  Eventually, the chrysalis fell still, and now we wait for 10-14 days before we can see all of the change that is taking place on the inside!

6.2.12



Absolutely GORGEOUS!  A spectacular green Monarch chrysalis!


{FINDINGS}
0 eggs
1 caterpillars

{EGGS WAITING TO HATCH}
0 - after the 5 eggs were a week old, they were well past the 3-5 day incubation period, and so it seems that they will not hatch.

{HATCHLINGS}
0

{NURSERY GUESTS}
0

{CATERPILLARS}
55 Total
25 large {+/- 9-14 days old}
15 medium {7 days old}
13 small {3 & 5 days old}
1 chrysalis

Today has been an amazing day!  I stopped to pick some wild Milkweed along the road and found a 9 to 10 day old caterpillar!  Usually I can only find the itty bitty guys!  I also was witness to my first chrysalis! After caring for this amazing caterpillar for 9 days, I watched with my nose to the glass as the caterpillars skin split and the chrysalis emerged!  Unbelievable!  I cannot wait to watch this butterfly emerge!

Friday, June 1, 2012

6.1.12



When a Monarch caterpillar is getting ready to change into a chrysalis, it spins a patch of silk from its mouth, and then attaches its bum to the silk and hand upside down in the 'J Position' for nearly 24 hours before the change to chrysalis takes place.  


{FINDINGS}
0 eggs
0 caterpillars

{EGGS WAITING TO HATCH}
5 total eggs

{HATCHLINGS}
0

{NURSERY GUESTS}
29

{CATERPILLARS}
54

***Still no chrysalis yet... still patiently waiting, but it is close because my largest caterpillar has spun a silky thread and is hanging upside down in the 'J position' getting ready to change!