By
C.J. Hirschfield
Around
this time last year, it felt like Fairyland was running a drug operation.
Dozens of people would come to our door and say that Jackie sent them; they
were here to pick up the plants.
The plants weren’t marijuana, they were
milkweed – the food that monarch caterpillars need to undergo their dramatic
transformation into butterflies.
Success! |
Our
scores of volunteers helped us find and treat monarch eggs and milkweed to
prevent against disease, fostered the caterpillars at home (1,200 last year),
and then released them near our park.
Well,
it’s that time again, and Fairyland horticulturist Jackie Salas is sending out
the word: Lake Merritt monarchs need your help! Do you have what it takes?
Here’s
how we got involved in the first place. First and foremost, we love butterflies.
We also love teaching urban kids about the rich ecosystem that exists all
around them.
Monarch caterpillars preparing for their chrysalis phase. |
Lakeside Park, where Fairyland
lives, has an overwintering and breeding monarch butterfly population. This is both
good and bad news: good because monarch butterfly numbers are increasing, bad
because with the increase in numbers there has been an increase in pathogens
that harm the butterflies.
In order to keep the population
healthy, we have developed a cleaning protocol to keep the butterflies safe,
which we follow in our Monarch Magic breeding program. We collect insect eggs
and food, and bleach them in specific concentrations to eliminate pathogens. The
caterpillars that hatch from the eggs are raised in terrariums until they reach
adulthood. Adult butterflies are tested for the pathogens by our friends at the
University of Georgia’s Project
Monarch Health before they are released into the wild. (We hope to learn to
test them ourselves this year!)
Monarch caterpillar in Fairyland gardens. |
And here’s what we need.
We’re looking for dedicated
adult volunteers (18+) to help. A mandatory training session will cover the
details of how to perform the essential duties, such as locating monarch eggs
(they’re so small!), bleaching eggs and bleaching the caterpillars’ milkweed
food source.
This year we will host two
training sessions; potential volunteers must attend one of the trainings. The
trainings will be held from 1 to 3 p.m. on Saturday, Oct. 7, and 1 to 3 p.m. Wednesday,
Oct. 11. The volunteer commitment begins with the training session and
continues with weekly two-hour volunteer sessions through mid-December.
Kim Abbott, who retired from a
career with the U.S. Department of Energy overseeing safety compliance at the
Lawrence Berkeley Labs, is returning as a Monarch Magic volunteer this year.
“At first I wasn’t finding eggs,” he recalls, “but once I knew what I was
looking for, I saw them all over the place!”
Healthy monarch butterflies just before they're released into the wild. |
Kim likes knowing that he’s
helping the monarch population survive, and adds that his volunteer time brings
him a lot of pleasure. He particularly likes knowing that some of “his” eggs
end up as caterpillars fostered by local schools and senior centers.
If you are interested in helping monarch butterflies and can commit to volunteering two hours a week with this program, please email Outreach@fairyland.org. Please include your reason for interest in the program, and any gardening or entomological (insect) experience you have.
If you are interested in helping monarch butterflies and can commit to volunteering two hours a week with this program, please email Outreach@fairyland.org. Please include your reason for interest in the program, and any gardening or entomological (insect) experience you have.
If you can’t commit to
volunteering but would like to be added to our list of “foster families” that
take clean caterpillars home to raise, please email horticulture@fairyland.org.
__
C.J. Hirschfield has served for 15 years as executive director of Children’s Fairyland, where she is charged with the overall operation of the nation’s first storybook theme park.
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