|
Summer
1998

Stroking
Words
by Stephen Packard. Photos by Ron Panzer.
The
three species in this photo are engaged in an ancient ritual.
The camouflaged caterpillar, as it eats rare flowers, is
attended by ants. Soon the ant on the back of the pink caterpillar
will begin to stroke it. Something wonderful is in process.
The
fat caterpillar would tempt many an insect predator, were
it not for the ants that guard it. Nice ants, huh? Yet these
are also selfish ants, perhaps even addicted ants. They
softly brush that larval body with their antennae, they
caress it, and it reciprocates by producing droplets of
a fluid that the attendants devour greedily. Yes, an intimate
relationship proceeds in these rare flowers.
Many
of the gossamer-winged butterflies the coppers, the blues,
the hairstreaks have co-evolved with certain ants to supply
each others' needs. The butterfly caterpillar makes substances
that are highly sought-after by the ant, and the ants ward
off parasites and predators that would otherwise eat the
future butterfly. When full and fat, the caterpillar may
head down into the thick of the ant's underground nest to
pupate, overwinter, and emerge as a butterfly the following
spring.
What
does the plant get out of this? Perhaps nothing, but perhaps
the ants protect it too. Ants do protect many plant species
that provide them with special services. When ants were
experimentally removed from certain other plant species,
the plants were consumed utterly by hordes of herbivores
the ants had fended off.
This
caterpillar is the larva of the silvery blue a butterfly
thought extinct in Illinois until the 1980s. At that time,
interest in re-discovering the savanna inspired biologists
to look in new places. Where botanists found remnant populations
of savanna flora, ornithologists found rare birds, mycologists
found rare mushrooms, and lepidopterists found rare butterflies.
The
silvery blue was rediscovered by Ron Panzer at Wadsworth
Savanna, a site first identified by botanists for its rare
plants, like the veiny pea which the rare caterpillar was
busily eating. The Lake County Forest Preserve District
bought the land, and restoration management began.
That's
conservation. Without it we lose species, but "species
loss" sounds so thin. What's really lost is millions
of thriving lives. The fragrances, the bird calls overhead,
the stroking. Millions of years of evolution thrive in Chicago
Wilderness. Conservation saves the ancient drama, and keeps
its life fresh with ours.

What
is Chicago Wilderness? | Store | Donations | Contact
Us | Home

Copyright
2008 Chicago Wilderness Magazine, Inc.
Revised .
|