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If you had never seen a butterfly,
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you might not believe they were real.
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They are so colorful, they can't help but be noticed,
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and so fragile that being noticed should spell their doom.
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Yet butterflies are truly among nature's
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most surprising survivors...
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taking on unique powers of flight.
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From a dark and dangerous past...
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butterflies have triumphed in almost every place the planet.
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They are masters of deception and seduction,
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and they're indispensable to much of life on Earth.
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This is the story of how butterflies
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have become one of the great wonders of the world.
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We don't really know
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where the name "butterfly" came from.
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The origin of the word is lost to time...
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And in many respects,
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butterflies themselves are a mystery.
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But we do know they are remarkable.
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There are butterfly stories from every culture.
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One Chinese legend turned two tragic lovers
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into butterflies some 1,600 years ago.
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And that's what they've come to symbolize most --
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transformation...
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metamorphosis...
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the ability to abandon an earthbound body...
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and take to the air on gossamer wings.
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Squint into a midsummer meadow in bloom.
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It's as though the flowers can fly.
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But what if we followed not our imaginations,
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but real butterflies into the worlds they actually live in?
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What would we see then?
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How did these incandescent creatures come to be?
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In the wilds of Mozambique, Africa,
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a team of scientists are tracking down
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the story of how butterflies began.
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They've come to Gorongosa National Park,
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one of the world's great centers of biodiversity.
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Armed with the tried and true tools of the collection trade,
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the team tries to get a sense
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of all the butterflies that live here.
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Oh!
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Akito Kawahara
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of the Florida Museum of Natural History
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studies the evolution and diversity of invertebrates.
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Especially of moths and butterflies,
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a vast group called the Lepidoptera.
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In Mozambique, we see all kinds of new species
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all the time and we're also sampling butterflies
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to try to get an idea of
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when butterflies evolved and came about.
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We still don't know much about them at all.
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It's thought that the Lepidoptera arose
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as flowering plants began to flourish across the planet.
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But there are so few traces of these delicate creatures
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in the fossil record,
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Akito can only discover their origins
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by looking at the ones alive today.
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Yet, he can still step deep into the past...
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in the primal darkness of the African night.
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The very air is thick with life.
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These are creatures from an ancient world.
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Akito and his team are attempting to reach back
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into the story of the butterfly's older cousins --
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moths.
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A mantis. There's a mantis.
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There's a mantis on the lens here.
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I know.
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160,000 species of moths described so far
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and probably 500,000, maybe a million species in the world.
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We are just, just beginning to understand what's happening.
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This is a moth we want. We want to cup that.
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This is a white pyralid. This is a white crambid.
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From the astonishing gathering of insects
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drawn to the lights,
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he handpicks the characters he's interested in.
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This is a noctuid...
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about 150 maybe, 200?
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Moths are primarily creatures of the night.
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The key to their connection with brightly colored butterflies
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may lie in the predators
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that are also drawn to this midnight swarm.
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Bats.
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They're hunting up high.
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The bats have brought Jesse Barber
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of Boise State University here tonight.
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He's an expert on the ecology of sound.
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Together, Jesse and Akito are investigating how a predator
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and its prey shape each other.
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We're trying to figure out how bats
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are driving moth evolution.
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There's a bat. Is it in view?
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Yep, Yep, right through the space.
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Nice!
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As fast, insect hunting bats
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course through the air,
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Jesse and his team record what we cannot hear --
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the sounds of bat sonar.
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The recordings are slowed down to a frequency within our range.
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Flying with mouths open,
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the bats generate high-speed sound signals
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from their larynx,
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"seeing" with sound waves and echoes.
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Pinpointing the moths' locations,
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the bats scoop them up in a catcher's mitt-like membrane
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that stretches between their feet.
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Then Jesse's ultrasonic microphones
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pick up something more surprising --
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moths sending out their own signals
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pitched at the same frequencies as the bats' sonar.
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To try and understand which moths are making
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ultrasound back at bats,
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we bring them into a lab setting in the field
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and play echolocation calls back at them
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and try and understand who makes sound.
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We then have to figure out why,
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and we know form lab work
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back at our universities in the States
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that part of the reason they make sound
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is to jam sonar.
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Rolling.
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Jesse and Akito are attempting to unravel
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millions of years of a sonic arms race
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we've never been able to hear.
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Bats hunting with sonar, moths fighting back by jamming it.
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These moths are actually screaming
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at incredibly high intensities back at bats.
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Oh, my gosh!
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Turning the gain down.
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Lots of sound!
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While there are still so many mysteries to solve,
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Akito and his team of collaborators
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have made an extraordinary breakthrough.
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Using DNA sequencing, he is tracing the genetic origin
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of all the butterflies we've identified.
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Remarkably, they all share a single ancestor --
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a tiny brown moth that fled the night
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some 50 million years ago,
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driven, perhaps, by the rise of bats
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relentlessly hunting the dark skies.
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In a world full of light, moths burst into color.
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We call these daytime fliers butterflies,
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but they are really some 20,000 species of colorful moths
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that have spread across every continent except Antarctica.
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The most cosmopolitan of all is the painted lady.
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She can be found throughout Europe, from India to Asia,
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from North into South America, and all across Africa.
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With its bright splashes of orange,
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her body is both beautiful and alien...
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and it's equipped with keen butterfly senses.
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The tips of her legs can "taste" the leaf she stands on.
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Her eyes have more than 30,000 lenses.
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Instead of a nose,
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she has antennae that catch the faintest scent.
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And she hears with membranes in her wings.
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Our painted lady isn't just resting with wings folded,
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she's listening for danger.
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But one of her most remarkable features is what
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we think of as a tongue -- a proboscis.
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It's made of two long strands
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that zip together to form a tube.
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She usually carries it coiled, just below her head.
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To eat is to drink,
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so a butterfly simply uncoils her proboscis,
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and with the aid of a micro-pump inside her head,
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pumps liquid nourishment up into her body.
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And it's not just nectar they're drinking.
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They can imbibe all kinds of beverages
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from lots of different surfaces.
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Sap from tree bark and mineral-rich waters
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from sand banks and tidal edges.
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Some even sip the blood, sweat,
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and tears of various hapless neighbors.
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Being able to mop up many liquids
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has helped butterflies thrive all around the world.
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And what's been good for butterflies has been very good
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for all the plants they feed on.
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Flowers prepare for butterfly visits.
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They make nectar to offer a meal,
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but it's actually a form of seduction.
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The real takeaway is pollen, the agent of procreation.
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Pollen resembles a sticky powder,
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and as the butterfly sips from the flower,
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its proboscis can't help but pick some up.
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But the butterfly doesn't seem to mind...
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or even seem to notice
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that its proboscis is encrusted with pollen.
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It coils it up in the usual way, and it's off to the next flower.
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The plant is counting on the butterfly
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to bring its pollen to flowers of the same kind,
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completing a sexual connection the plant needs.
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That's how the birds and the bees --
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and butterflies, too --
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have helped plants reproduce for a very long time.
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But then, there's the intriguing case of the flame azalea tree.
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Flame azaleas are native
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to the Appalachian Mountains of Virginia,
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and from late spring to midsummer,
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it's easy to see how they got their name.
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All along the high ridges, bright yellow to blazing orange
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blossoms burst out like signal fires,
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unmistakable beacons to pollinators far and wide.
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But while the flowers are showy and obvious,
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just how they are pollinated is not.
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Mary Jane Epps of Mary Baldwin University
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reveals that the mystery lies
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in the flowers' unusual architecture.
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So, one of the really cool things
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about flame azalea flowers
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is the way the reproductive parts are situated.
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So, you have the petals, which are fused into this long tube,
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and the nectar is actually born down at the bottom of that tube.
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And here, we have the anthers,
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which are the pollen-bearing part of the plant.
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And sticking even farther out of the flower --
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and you'll notice it's sort of curved
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at a slightly different angle often --
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is what's called the stigma,
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that's the female reproductive organ.
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And so, for pollination to occur,
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which, of course, is required for fruit to set
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and seeds to form on a plant,
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you have to have pollen deposited on this stigma.
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There are lots and lots of different insects
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that come to flame azaleas -- various bees,
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butterflies, flies, even beetles.
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Noticing a lot of these bees would gather lots of pollen
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but never make contact with that stigma.
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So, we started wondering who actually does
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the pollination here.
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The flower's design foils
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even a large eastern tiger swallowtail
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as it comes for a drink of nectar.
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So here's a swallowtail...
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coming right in to this azalea.
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Then Mary Jane discovered
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the telltale fingerprints a butterfly leaves behind.
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Wow. All of these have butterfly wing scales on them.
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As the butterfly drinks,
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its wings constantly brush against the anthers.
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The faintest touch pulls out a chain of pollen,
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like a party streamer...
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and with another wingbeat,
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deposits some on the sticky stigma.
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Pollination has begun!
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This discovery was a true surprise.
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It's just the third case of wing pollination ever recorded.
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But as the swallowtails flutter from tree to tree,
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it appears their wings have become an essential partner
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in the sex life of the flame azaleas.
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A painted lady has her own offspring to create...
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and lays dozens of tiny eggs of a surprising blue.
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Each egg is attached to a leaf with a special glue
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that keeps it in place at any angle.
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They are jewel-like and almost microscopically small.
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She clusters them on leaves the babies will be able to eat
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when they hatch.
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And that's the end of her motherly duties.
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But in just five days,
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a little caterpillar begins to break out of its shell.
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The eggs were only the size of a pinhead.
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The baby caterpillars are smaller than a grain of rice.
263
00:21:53,546 --> 00:21:56,180
Even the plant hairs sprouting from the leaf
264
00:21:56,215 --> 00:21:58,549
are giant obstacles for them.
265
00:22:06,526 --> 00:22:08,859
Almost nothing about this little caterpillar
266
00:22:08,895 --> 00:22:12,730
resembles its parents.
267
00:22:12,765 --> 00:22:16,765
With 8 pairs of legs, a black spiky suit,
268
00:22:16,836 --> 00:22:18,936
and no wings at all,
269
00:22:18,971 --> 00:22:21,272
it's an entirely different animal.
270
00:22:27,213 --> 00:22:31,082
And its whole world is confined to its host plant.
271
00:22:35,221 --> 00:22:39,123
And so it eats.
272
00:22:39,158 --> 00:22:42,993
The more it eats, the faster it grows,
273
00:22:43,029 --> 00:22:47,029
and thus begins a life of one transformation after another.
274
00:22:51,938 --> 00:22:55,339
Little painted ladies will transition through 5 stages
275
00:22:55,375 --> 00:22:57,208
called instars,
276
00:22:57,243 --> 00:22:59,810
building a new body each time.
277
00:23:04,584 --> 00:23:07,451
Every stage is a mini metamorphosis
278
00:23:07,487 --> 00:23:08,686
as hormones trigger
279
00:23:08,721 --> 00:23:11,789
ongoing changes in the caterpillar's body.
280
00:23:15,395 --> 00:23:19,330
But unable to fly away, they're an easy target.
281
00:23:25,371 --> 00:23:29,039
A young blue jay, no longer being fed by its parents,
282
00:23:29,075 --> 00:23:30,775
can make a good start on its own
283
00:23:30,810 --> 00:23:33,043
with helpless little caterpillars.
284
00:23:57,637 --> 00:24:00,871
But some caterpillars are able to fight back.
285
00:24:03,976 --> 00:24:05,843
A monarch is already set
286
00:24:05,878 --> 00:24:09,878
on an elaborate course of self-defense.
287
00:24:10,383 --> 00:24:13,884
The milkweed it feeds on is full of noxious chemicals,
288
00:24:13,920 --> 00:24:17,920
and the caterpillar will store them up and become noxious, too.
289
00:24:20,626 --> 00:24:22,793
Some caterpillars are so toxic,
290
00:24:22,829 --> 00:24:25,429
they can make their predators really sick.
291
00:24:27,500 --> 00:24:30,034
These plump, juicy-looking characters are busy
292
00:24:30,069 --> 00:24:32,303
weaponizing black cherry leaves
293
00:24:32,338 --> 00:24:35,272
into a version of hydrogen cyanide.
294
00:24:45,318 --> 00:24:47,852
All across the butterfly kingdom,
295
00:24:47,887 --> 00:24:50,921
20,000 species known so far,
296
00:24:50,957 --> 00:24:54,525
20,00 different caterpillars parade.
297
00:25:06,305 --> 00:25:10,305
Some glow a leafy green...
298
00:25:10,576 --> 00:25:14,345
others wear elaborate disguises...
299
00:25:14,380 --> 00:25:16,480
or simply taste terrible.
300
00:25:23,055 --> 00:25:25,523
This one tries looking like a snake!
301
00:25:33,332 --> 00:25:36,834
Sometimes, it's hard to see what look they're going for.
302
00:25:42,708 --> 00:25:46,143
Others just look disgusting...
303
00:25:46,178 --> 00:25:49,380
like bird droppings...
304
00:25:49,415 --> 00:25:53,350
or even an unappetizing fur ball.
305
00:26:05,431 --> 00:26:09,431
It's all to give them a chance to eat and not be eaten.
306
00:26:13,139 --> 00:26:16,006
It's a problem they face all their lives.
307
00:26:16,042 --> 00:26:19,610
So if they carry their noxious chemicals into adulthood,
308
00:26:19,645 --> 00:26:22,212
they want their predators to know it.
309
00:26:28,487 --> 00:26:30,721
That foul-tasting monarch caterpillar
310
00:26:30,756 --> 00:26:34,756
passes its milkweed toxins on to its butterfly form.
311
00:26:35,061 --> 00:26:37,661
Predators learn quickly not to eat it.
312
00:26:40,933 --> 00:26:43,567
And so its cousin, the queen butterfly,
313
00:26:43,603 --> 00:26:47,603
has converged on the same look.
314
00:26:47,807 --> 00:26:51,807
It, too, feeds on milkweed and tastes just as bad.
315
00:26:53,312 --> 00:26:55,145
By looking so similar,
316
00:26:55,181 --> 00:26:57,147
it doubles down on the warning signal
317
00:26:57,183 --> 00:26:59,850
the monarch sends to predators.
318
00:27:04,690 --> 00:27:08,690
But some butterflies get away with a bold-faced lie.
319
00:27:13,165 --> 00:27:15,966
This highly toxic pipe-vine swallowtail
320
00:27:16,002 --> 00:27:19,403
is loaded with plant acids.
321
00:27:19,438 --> 00:27:20,938
Its beautiful markings
322
00:27:20,973 --> 00:27:24,708
are copied by the black swallowtail...
323
00:27:24,744 --> 00:27:28,712
and a dark version of the eastern tiger swallowtail.
324
00:27:30,783 --> 00:27:33,450
It's very hard to tell them all apart,
325
00:27:33,486 --> 00:27:36,387
and that's precisely the point.
326
00:27:38,457 --> 00:27:41,091
Two of them are perfectly good to eat...
327
00:27:43,329 --> 00:27:45,629
but they're hoping to scare predators away
328
00:27:45,665 --> 00:27:49,566
simply by looking like their poisonous cousin, the pipe-vine.
329
00:27:53,272 --> 00:27:56,273
But whether your colors are true or false,
330
00:27:56,308 --> 00:28:00,308
you can't fool all of the predators all of the time.
331
00:28:01,347 --> 00:28:03,447
Butterflies are such an important prey
332
00:28:03,482 --> 00:28:05,349
for so many creatures,
333
00:28:05,384 --> 00:28:09,384
they live in constant danger in every field and forest.
334
00:28:22,535 --> 00:28:25,002
When you're surrounded by enemies,
335
00:28:25,037 --> 00:28:27,538
it good to have an ally.
336
00:28:29,542 --> 00:28:31,341
From deep in the Peruvian Amazon,
337
00:28:31,377 --> 00:28:34,611
a report has surfaced of some strange behavior
338
00:28:34,647 --> 00:28:36,447
between a butterfly
339
00:28:36,482 --> 00:28:38,682
and one of the most formidable creatures
340
00:28:38,718 --> 00:28:40,818
in all the rainforest.
341
00:28:43,756 --> 00:28:47,756
They're organized, disciplined,
342
00:28:48,294 --> 00:28:51,662
relentless, adaptable.
343
00:28:56,068 --> 00:29:00,068
The collective power of ants is enough to intimidate anybody.
344
00:29:03,809 --> 00:29:05,509
But Aaron Pomerantz,
345
00:29:05,544 --> 00:29:09,346
a PhD student at the University of California,
346
00:29:09,381 --> 00:29:10,948
has come to Peru to follow up
347
00:29:10,983 --> 00:29:13,784
on a startling account of a butterfly
348
00:29:13,819 --> 00:29:15,953
braving such an army.
349
00:29:15,988 --> 00:29:17,788
So a collaborator of mine,
350
00:29:17,823 --> 00:29:19,289
his name is Phil Torres,
351
00:29:19,325 --> 00:29:20,924
he noticed that there were these butterflies
352
00:29:20,960 --> 00:29:23,827
that were sort of hanging out with ants on bamboo stalks,
353
00:29:23,863 --> 00:29:26,029
which was kind of odd because
354
00:29:26,065 --> 00:29:28,398
ants usually treat butterflies as they would anything else.
355
00:29:28,434 --> 00:29:29,700
They'll attack them.
356
00:29:29,735 --> 00:29:32,836
They'll, you know, use them as a food source.
357
00:29:32,872 --> 00:29:36,507
The bamboo itself is an important part of the story.
358
00:29:36,542 --> 00:29:38,008
From what I've been reading,
359
00:29:38,043 --> 00:29:39,409
not a lot of things eat bamboo.
360
00:29:39,445 --> 00:29:43,445
It's really tough, you know, old, woody cellulose.
361
00:29:44,016 --> 00:29:45,649
But Aaron began searching for
362
00:29:45,684 --> 00:29:47,751
just the right young stalks
363
00:29:47,787 --> 00:29:51,121
and made a fascinating discovery.
364
00:29:51,157 --> 00:29:55,157
Tiny ants swarm all over the ends of the stalks,
365
00:29:55,361 --> 00:29:59,329
drinking a sugary nectar seeping from the tips of the shoots.
366
00:30:06,038 --> 00:30:08,872
At the base of the bamboo there are these leaves.
367
00:30:08,908 --> 00:30:10,307
So, as I pulled one back...
368
00:30:10,342 --> 00:30:13,177
Oh, we got caterpillars!
369
00:30:13,212 --> 00:30:16,513
...there were ants hovering over them,
370
00:30:16,549 --> 00:30:19,049
and I thought, oh, man, this might be the first time anyone
371
00:30:19,084 --> 00:30:21,721
has ever seen the larval stage for this butterfly.
372
00:30:25,357 --> 00:30:29,357
Aaron had uncovered a story that was new to science.
373
00:30:30,129 --> 00:30:33,096
He had discovered the unusual life cycle of a butterfly
374
00:30:33,132 --> 00:30:37,067
called Adelotypa annulifera.
375
00:30:37,102 --> 00:30:41,102
Its tiny caterpillars are doted on by ferocious ants.
376
00:30:49,381 --> 00:30:50,948
Oh, very cool.
377
00:30:50,983 --> 00:30:53,984
Then, Aaron noticed that the caterpillars, too,
378
00:30:54,019 --> 00:30:56,086
were drinking the bamboo sap,
379
00:30:56,121 --> 00:31:00,121
all the while under the protection of the ants.
380
00:31:00,192 --> 00:31:01,859
if we actually tried to get in there
381
00:31:01,894 --> 00:31:03,160
and handle the caterpillar,
382
00:31:03,195 --> 00:31:05,195
the ants would attack us.
383
00:31:05,231 --> 00:31:07,297
You know, whether you're a parasitoid wasp,
384
00:31:07,333 --> 00:31:08,799
or a bird, or a human,
385
00:31:08,834 --> 00:31:11,501
these ants are going to protect them until their last breath.
386
00:31:17,810 --> 00:31:21,011
The caterpillars earn this security service
387
00:31:21,046 --> 00:31:24,948
by producing a sweet nectar of their own from the bamboo sap.
388
00:31:28,654 --> 00:31:32,654
It's highly nutritious and rich in energy,
389
00:31:33,459 --> 00:31:35,259
and the ants mob the caterpillars
390
00:31:35,294 --> 00:31:38,328
to gain access to this special brew.
391
00:31:44,436 --> 00:31:46,603
But what of the butterflies?
392
00:31:46,639 --> 00:31:48,472
How does this story end?
393
00:31:50,943 --> 00:31:52,876
Aaron sets up a time-lapse camera
394
00:31:52,912 --> 00:31:55,345
focused on the tip of a bamboo shoot.
395
00:31:55,381 --> 00:31:56,980
The butterflies are very rare.
396
00:31:57,016 --> 00:31:59,249
They're very skittish, so it could be that our presence
397
00:31:59,285 --> 00:32:00,951
is preventing them from coming by,
398
00:32:00,986 --> 00:32:03,854
but we're going to let this sit and take an image
399
00:32:03,889 --> 00:32:05,789
every set half hour or so.
400
00:32:05,824 --> 00:32:08,859
And, if we're lucky, maybe the butterfly will come by.
401
00:32:26,412 --> 00:32:29,680
Ah, there we go!
402
00:32:29,715 --> 00:32:32,950
Left undisturbed for hours in the rainforest,
403
00:32:32,985 --> 00:32:34,551
the camera has captured a glimpse
404
00:32:34,586 --> 00:32:37,754
of these most remarkable butterflies.
405
00:32:40,926 --> 00:32:44,695
They, too, come to bamboo to sip the nectar in a rare instance
406
00:32:44,730 --> 00:32:45,963
of butterflies
407
00:32:45,998 --> 00:32:49,998
and their caterpillars relying on the same food.
408
00:32:50,936 --> 00:32:54,438
The nectar appears to fuel their entire lives.
409
00:32:57,443 --> 00:33:01,443
And amazingly, the ants allow it.
410
00:33:01,680 --> 00:33:04,214
It's the only example we know of where ants
411
00:33:04,249 --> 00:33:06,984
and butterflies feed together.
412
00:33:09,421 --> 00:33:13,421
And look closely at the butterfly's wings.
413
00:33:13,926 --> 00:33:17,926
Red spots grouped in threes may be mimicking the ants
414
00:33:18,230 --> 00:33:20,764
and doubling the butterfly's defenses.
415
00:33:23,068 --> 00:33:27,068
Instead of a butterfly, a bird might look down and see nasty,
416
00:33:27,106 --> 00:33:29,039
stinging insects,
417
00:33:29,074 --> 00:33:31,341
while the ants, looking up,
418
00:33:31,377 --> 00:33:34,678
see a reassuring version of themselves.
419
00:33:47,326 --> 00:33:50,627
With or without bodyguards, a caterpillar's job
420
00:33:50,662 --> 00:33:52,329
is to store up enough energy
421
00:33:52,364 --> 00:33:55,999
to undergo one of the greatest rites of passage
422
00:33:56,035 --> 00:33:57,901
in all of nature.
423
00:34:05,044 --> 00:34:08,045
A painted lady has reached her last instar
424
00:34:08,080 --> 00:34:12,015
and finally stops eating.
425
00:34:12,051 --> 00:34:16,051
She spins a bit of silk, attaches herself to a stem,
426
00:34:17,122 --> 00:34:19,356
and hangs head down.
427
00:34:21,427 --> 00:34:24,261
Underneath her final caterpillar skin,
428
00:34:24,296 --> 00:34:27,731
she is once more creating a new body,
429
00:34:27,766 --> 00:34:30,500
but this time, it's stunningly different
430
00:34:30,536 --> 00:34:33,303
than the 5 bodies she has made before.
431
00:34:47,920 --> 00:34:50,587
When she finally wriggles free...
432
00:34:50,622 --> 00:34:54,458
she is no longer a caterpillar at all.
433
00:34:54,493 --> 00:34:58,261
She has become a chrysalis, a butterfly pupa.
434
00:35:00,699 --> 00:35:03,600
Her new shape is already a blueprint for the creature
435
00:35:03,635 --> 00:35:06,403
she will ultimately be.
436
00:35:06,438 --> 00:35:10,438
But now she's in the midst of a transformation so radical,
437
00:35:10,943 --> 00:35:14,778
science is still attempting to decipher how she does it.
438
00:35:19,051 --> 00:35:23,051
Her outer skin dries and hardens.
439
00:35:23,922 --> 00:35:25,622
For most of the next two weeks,
440
00:35:25,657 --> 00:35:29,657
the dull casing of skin looks dormant.
441
00:35:30,529 --> 00:35:34,529
But inside, special cells send out instructions
442
00:35:34,666 --> 00:35:38,666
that complete a miraculous metamorphosis.
443
00:36:05,264 --> 00:36:07,464
Then...
444
00:36:07,499 --> 00:36:09,166
suddenly...
445
00:36:11,436 --> 00:36:15,436
she splits that skin open and is born again
446
00:36:15,574 --> 00:36:18,408
as a fully formed butterfly!
447
00:36:27,986 --> 00:36:31,121
She seems surprised by her unfamiliar body.
448
00:36:35,160 --> 00:36:38,895
How strange her new extended legs must feel.
449
00:36:44,536 --> 00:36:48,004
Her head now has large, complex eyes.
450
00:36:50,742 --> 00:36:54,742
Her jaws have been replaced with a long proboscis.
451
00:36:54,913 --> 00:36:58,381
Its two unruly strands must be zipped together,
452
00:36:58,417 --> 00:37:01,351
and she struggles to get them under control.
453
00:37:08,026 --> 00:37:12,026
And now she has the ultimate in new parts -- wings!
454
00:37:14,933 --> 00:37:17,033
Slowly, they unfurl.
455
00:37:41,860 --> 00:37:45,161
Finally, she takes flight,
456
00:37:45,197 --> 00:37:47,264
joining a new cohort of butterflies
457
00:37:47,299 --> 00:37:50,900
trying out their wings for the very first time.
458
00:37:58,543 --> 00:38:01,378
And the way they fly is unique.
459
00:38:06,418 --> 00:38:09,552
Butterflies have such large wings for their size,
460
00:38:09,588 --> 00:38:13,323
they contract their entire bodies to move them.
461
00:38:19,731 --> 00:38:22,766
They lurch and flop around,
462
00:38:22,801 --> 00:38:26,801
big wings laboring through the air.
463
00:38:30,342 --> 00:38:34,342
Their flight may look awkward, but none of it is a mistake.
464
00:38:37,249 --> 00:38:41,249
They are so maneuverable, and their flight plan so erratic,
465
00:38:41,286 --> 00:38:44,554
they're very hard for predators to catch in the air.
466
00:38:48,660 --> 00:38:51,795
Their large wings act like an enormous rudder,
467
00:38:51,830 --> 00:38:55,830
enabling a change in direction with almost every flap.
468
00:39:02,207 --> 00:39:05,308
They hover by stroking back through the swirling wake
469
00:39:05,344 --> 00:39:07,243
they just created.
470
00:39:14,419 --> 00:39:17,554
They often clap their wings behind their backs,
471
00:39:17,589 --> 00:39:21,491
squeezing out a jet of air to push themselves forward.
472
00:39:28,333 --> 00:39:32,333
Despite what it looks like, they fly with complete control.
473
00:39:44,883 --> 00:39:48,883
Now they can feed on nectar.
474
00:39:49,020 --> 00:39:51,654
But a butterfly doesn't go through metamorphosis
475
00:39:51,690 --> 00:39:53,790
just for a new kind of food.
476
00:39:58,630 --> 00:40:01,364
If caterpillars were made for eating,
477
00:40:01,400 --> 00:40:04,100
butterflies are made for mating.
478
00:40:08,573 --> 00:40:12,573
Caterpillars are just juveniles, unable to breed,
479
00:40:12,744 --> 00:40:15,245
their lives limited to a leaf or two.
480
00:40:18,784 --> 00:40:21,384
Now they are adults,
481
00:40:21,420 --> 00:40:25,420
and wings open up a world of possibilities.
482
00:40:30,028 --> 00:40:33,229
They compete...
483
00:40:33,265 --> 00:40:36,299
and flirt...
484
00:40:36,334 --> 00:40:38,802
dancing in the air...
485
00:40:38,837 --> 00:40:42,572
circling skyward in a butterfly ballet.
486
00:41:00,091 --> 00:41:03,426
When they do mate, they join at the abdomen,
487
00:41:03,462 --> 00:41:05,228
facing away from each other.
488
00:41:16,408 --> 00:41:18,908
How long they stay together varies widely
489
00:41:18,944 --> 00:41:20,910
from couple to couple.
490
00:41:24,749 --> 00:41:28,749
Incredibly, some partners stay joined for hours.
491
00:41:37,929 --> 00:41:40,029
But not long after they part,
492
00:41:40,065 --> 00:41:42,432
the female must find the right host plant
493
00:41:42,467 --> 00:41:44,267
on which to lay her eggs.
494
00:41:48,773 --> 00:41:50,807
Painted ladies are able to choose
495
00:41:50,842 --> 00:41:52,475
among a hundred different plants
496
00:41:52,511 --> 00:41:54,677
their caterpillars will eat.
497
00:41:54,713 --> 00:41:58,713
Adults can survive on nectar from thorny acacia trees.
498
00:42:04,389 --> 00:42:08,389
And that brings their story here to the edge
499
00:42:10,362 --> 00:42:13,863
of the great Sahara Desert in North Africa.
500
00:42:18,970 --> 00:42:22,970
This harsh, remote landscape in the Anti-Atlas region of Morocco
501
00:42:24,109 --> 00:42:27,677
is more of a moonscape than a butterfly garden,
502
00:42:27,712 --> 00:42:29,946
but it's the starting point of a butterfly tale
503
00:42:29,981 --> 00:42:33,981
so astonishing, it's hard to believe.
504
00:42:38,790 --> 00:42:42,790
Hey, hey, yes!
505
00:42:42,894 --> 00:42:45,795
This is a... well, a very, very old painted lady.
506
00:42:45,830 --> 00:42:49,830
When you see one butterfly like this,
507
00:42:49,968 --> 00:42:53,968
you have to think what happened during his life or her life.
508
00:42:54,239 --> 00:42:58,239
Because you see all these wings that are so broken?
509
00:42:59,644 --> 00:43:03,644
So it's really a mystery what happened to this butterfly.
510
00:43:06,384 --> 00:43:08,117
Constanti Stefanescu
511
00:43:08,153 --> 00:43:11,120
of the Natural History Museum of Granollers
512
00:43:11,156 --> 00:43:14,457
has come from Spain to unravel the painted ladies'
513
00:43:14,492 --> 00:43:16,426
remarkable story.
514
00:43:20,131 --> 00:43:23,800
Intriguingly, the first to appear here in the fall
515
00:43:23,835 --> 00:43:26,402
are already at the end of their lives.
516
00:43:28,974 --> 00:43:32,075
They have to be coming from someplace else.
517
00:43:36,214 --> 00:43:39,882
So Constanti analyzed stable isotopes of hydrogen
518
00:43:39,918 --> 00:43:41,184
in their wings
519
00:43:41,219 --> 00:43:45,219
to identify the region where the butterflies were born.
520
00:43:45,657 --> 00:43:48,358
The results were a revelation.
521
00:43:52,097 --> 00:43:55,298
These worn and torn painted ladies, he discovered,
522
00:43:55,333 --> 00:43:59,202
had undertaken an impossible journey,
523
00:43:59,237 --> 00:44:03,237
some arriving in Morocco from as far away as the Arctic Circle.
524
00:44:08,647 --> 00:44:12,482
Their amazing feat of flying and endurance begins
525
00:44:12,517 --> 00:44:15,218
as the cool, wet winter in the desert
526
00:44:15,253 --> 00:44:17,854
turns to a hot, dry spring.
527
00:44:20,091 --> 00:44:23,393
Host plants and nectar sources begin to wither.
528
00:44:23,428 --> 00:44:26,129
Painted ladies suddenly depart,
529
00:44:26,164 --> 00:44:29,332
turning north with an urgent purpose,
530
00:44:29,367 --> 00:44:32,201
looking for fresh food for themselves
531
00:44:32,237 --> 00:44:34,737
and their caterpillars.
532
00:44:39,044 --> 00:44:41,177
After crossing the Atlas Mountains,
533
00:44:41,212 --> 00:44:44,714
it's a short hop from Morocco to Spain.
534
00:44:44,749 --> 00:44:47,083
But painted ladies even farther south
535
00:44:47,118 --> 00:44:51,054
departed months ago from the tropical edge of the Sahara,
536
00:44:51,089 --> 00:44:55,089
riding warm African winds all the way across the desert
537
00:44:55,527 --> 00:44:57,560
and the Mediterranean Sea.
538
00:45:00,465 --> 00:45:04,465
They arrive in Rome, Marseille,
539
00:45:06,137 --> 00:45:09,939
and Barcelona,
540
00:45:09,974 --> 00:45:12,709
and seek out some much needed nectar.
541
00:45:14,946 --> 00:45:18,047
Then they mate and lay eggs.
542
00:45:18,083 --> 00:45:22,083
In six to eight weeks, a new generation picks up the baton
543
00:45:22,754 --> 00:45:24,554
and continues north.
544
00:45:26,725 --> 00:45:30,725
They cross the Alps, fly up the Rhine,
545
00:45:31,830 --> 00:45:34,397
spreading all throughout Europe,
546
00:45:34,432 --> 00:45:38,432
stopping to create new generations all along the way.
547
00:45:39,704 --> 00:45:41,137
By the end of summer,
548
00:45:41,172 --> 00:45:44,907
they finally reach high into Scandinavia...
549
00:45:44,943 --> 00:45:48,044
and then suddenly disappear!
550
00:45:50,582 --> 00:45:54,450
What happens next has been one of the long-standing mysteries
551
00:45:54,486 --> 00:45:56,619
in natural history.
552
00:45:56,654 --> 00:45:59,455
No one had ever witnessed the return flight south
553
00:45:59,491 --> 00:46:01,591
of the painted ladies.
554
00:46:01,626 --> 00:46:05,094
They simply flew to the north and vanished.
555
00:46:07,599 --> 00:46:11,599
It was long thought they all died in the autumn.
556
00:46:11,703 --> 00:46:13,836
But Constanti Stefanescu knew
557
00:46:13,872 --> 00:46:17,872
that somehow they were returning to Africa.
558
00:46:18,076 --> 00:46:22,076
So he turned to Jason Chapman of Rothamsted Research in the UK.
559
00:46:23,748 --> 00:46:27,617
Jason studies the emerging field of aeroecology --
560
00:46:27,652 --> 00:46:31,320
how animals travel up in the atmosphere.
561
00:46:35,927 --> 00:46:37,960
This green drum-like apparatus
562
00:46:37,996 --> 00:46:41,631
is Jason's Vertical Looking Radar.
563
00:46:41,666 --> 00:46:43,966
It sends pulses of electromagnetic waves
564
00:46:44,002 --> 00:46:48,002
straight up, 4,000 feet into the sky.
565
00:46:53,244 --> 00:46:57,244
Any insect, bird, or bat that flies through its beam
566
00:46:57,549 --> 00:47:00,616
will bounce a signal back to the dish.
567
00:47:00,652 --> 00:47:03,219
Okay.
568
00:47:03,254 --> 00:47:05,822
But to interpret what the radar sees
569
00:47:05,857 --> 00:47:07,223
and physically confirm
570
00:47:07,258 --> 00:47:10,259
which animals are up in the atmosphere,
571
00:47:10,295 --> 00:47:14,163
Jason and his team send aloft a series of aerial nets
572
00:47:14,199 --> 00:47:17,500
attached to high-flying balloons.
573
00:47:17,535 --> 00:47:18,801
Well, the really exciting thing
about
574
00:47:18,837 --> 00:47:20,303
the new field of aeroecology
575
00:47:20,338 --> 00:47:23,139
is that we now have the tools that can allow us to figure out
576
00:47:23,174 --> 00:47:25,608
how insects are using wind currents
577
00:47:25,643 --> 00:47:27,376
or being affected by wind currents
578
00:47:27,412 --> 00:47:29,178
to carry out their migrations.
579
00:47:29,214 --> 00:47:31,314
Are we up?
580
00:47:43,695 --> 00:47:46,596
The sampling goes on day and night,
581
00:47:46,631 --> 00:47:48,531
and as the nets go up,
582
00:47:48,566 --> 00:47:52,566
they recede into a sky so vast, it seems an impossible task
583
00:47:53,271 --> 00:47:56,339
to measure and understand what's going on up there.
584
00:47:58,743 --> 00:48:01,611
But Jason and his radar and nets
585
00:48:01,646 --> 00:48:05,248
have revealed an unimagined global highway
586
00:48:05,283 --> 00:48:09,283
and solved the mystery of the vanishing butterflies.
587
00:48:11,789 --> 00:48:15,558
At any given hour, thousands of feet above our heads,
588
00:48:15,593 --> 00:48:19,593
there are literally trillions of insects riding the winds.
589
00:48:23,301 --> 00:48:27,203
Among them are millions of painted ladies.
590
00:48:30,441 --> 00:48:33,009
As autumn arrives high in Northern Europe,
591
00:48:33,044 --> 00:48:35,711
and their resources are running out,
592
00:48:35,747 --> 00:48:39,148
painted ladies do disappear.
593
00:48:39,183 --> 00:48:41,450
They launch themselves into prevailing winds
594
00:48:41,486 --> 00:48:45,486
1,500 feet above the ground.
595
00:48:45,823 --> 00:48:48,991
Guided by internal compasses set on the sun,
596
00:48:49,027 --> 00:48:53,027
they begin to stream south, flying at 30 miles per hour
597
00:48:53,564 --> 00:48:56,299
and up to 300 miles a day.
598
00:48:58,403 --> 00:49:01,437
Though these butterflies have never been there before,
599
00:49:01,472 --> 00:49:05,472
they are returning to the land of their ancestors.
600
00:49:05,910 --> 00:49:07,777
If conditions are good,
601
00:49:07,812 --> 00:49:11,812
this one generation will reach Africa in a week.
602
00:49:13,518 --> 00:49:15,918
Millions will continue flying south,
603
00:49:15,954 --> 00:49:19,855
across the Sahara to the tropics.
604
00:49:19,891 --> 00:49:23,891
From Africa to Scandinavia and back, painted ladies
605
00:49:24,062 --> 00:49:27,363
will have travelled some 9,000 miles,
606
00:49:27,398 --> 00:49:31,398
3,000 miles farther than their famous cousins, the monarchs.
607
00:49:33,237 --> 00:49:36,739
They are champions of distance and altitude,
608
00:49:36,774 --> 00:49:40,774
completing the longest migration of any insect ever discovered.
609
00:49:49,454 --> 00:49:51,921
Many are bound for Morocco,
610
00:49:51,956 --> 00:49:55,124
where Constanti Stefanescu and his team
611
00:49:55,159 --> 00:49:56,892
have been waiting for them.
612
00:49:59,297 --> 00:50:02,431
He can only imagine what they've been through
613
00:50:02,467 --> 00:50:05,301
and how such a small, fragile creature
614
00:50:05,336 --> 00:50:08,404
has accomplished such an enormous feat.
615
00:50:16,114 --> 00:50:18,347
This is a very old painted lady
616
00:50:18,383 --> 00:50:22,284
that has been attacked by a bird, probably.
617
00:50:22,320 --> 00:50:25,087
But she's still visiting the flowers
618
00:50:25,123 --> 00:50:27,723
and trying to obtain food.
619
00:50:38,002 --> 00:50:39,435
That's a male,
620
00:50:39,470 --> 00:50:43,005
a migrant that has come probably from Europe.
621
00:50:43,041 --> 00:50:47,041
In a one hour or so, he will start to defend territories
622
00:50:48,046 --> 00:50:50,579
and try to obtain a mate.
623
00:50:57,255 --> 00:50:59,555
And so, as one butterfly's story
624
00:50:59,590 --> 00:51:01,157
comes to an end,
625
00:51:01,192 --> 00:51:03,559
another's is just beginning.
626
00:51:05,296 --> 00:51:09,296
Painted ladies pass their torch on in a never-ending journey...
627
00:51:12,637 --> 00:51:14,870
from butterfly...
628
00:51:14,906 --> 00:51:17,640
to egg...
629
00:51:17,675 --> 00:51:20,943
to caterpillar...
630
00:51:20,978 --> 00:51:23,079
to chrysalis...
631
00:51:25,349 --> 00:51:28,818
to butterfly...
632
00:51:28,853 --> 00:51:32,254
in a ceaseless cycle of transformation.
633
00:51:37,528 --> 00:51:41,528
They are both ephemeral and eternal.
634
00:51:42,266 --> 00:51:43,899
And perhaps that's what we see
635
00:51:43,935 --> 00:51:46,302
when we look at real butterflies...
636
00:51:50,374 --> 00:51:53,976
delicate but enduring heroes
637
00:51:54,011 --> 00:51:56,712
in the long game of life.
49683
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