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Browse: Home   /   2018   /   August   /   Good Natured: Stinky Caterillars That Grow Into Beautiful Swallowtales
Good Natured: Stinky Caterillars That Grow Into Beautiful Swallowtales

Good Natured: Stinky Caterillars That Grow Into Beautiful Swallowtales

kanecountyconnects / August 17, 2018 / Comments Off on Good Natured: Stinky Caterillars That Grow Into Beautiful Swallowtales / Environment, Government, Kane County Forest Preserve District, Nature, Parks and Recreation, Public Service, WK-Features

  • This Good Natured column was written by Pam Otto, the manager of nature programs and interpretive services at the Hickory Knolls Discovery Center, a facility of the St. Charles Park District. She can be reached at 630-513-4346 or potto@stcparks.org.

All the hullabaloo about monarch butterflies and their potential endangerment has led me to wonder, “What’s up with black swallowtails?”

I started looking for them a couple weeks ago when I realized I hadn’t seen any yet this year. Then, as if by magic, an adult female appeared, fluttering her way toward the swath of Queen Anne’s lace I’d been inspecting. Aha! When the butterflies come, can eggs be far behind?

“Before” — Black Swallowtale caterpillar

As it turns out I didn’t have to wait long to find out. Later that morning I heard that Ryan Solomon, one of our Park District restoration ecologists, had found a black swallowtail caterpillar — on Queen Anne’s lace about 75 yards from the hip-high patch I’d waded through earlier.

Being just as curious about critters as I am, Ryan had carefully extracted his new little buddy from the pile of plants destined for the compost heap. He kindly offered to introduce us to his latest find.

Minutes later he was in the nature center office, fruit jar in hand. Inside, contentedly munching on more Queen Anne’s lace, was a good-sized Papilio polyxenes caterpillar.

Although they start out dark and knobby, with orange or red spots, once they’ve molted a few times, black swallowtail caterpillars turn green, black and yellow and can superficially appear similar to the now-famous monarch cats.

But closer inspection shows that the swallowtail’s pattern consists of dots and wavy lines, and their body posture appears hunched. Plus, they’re found only on plants in the parsley family.

Monarch caterpillars, by comparison, live on milkweed and display alternating bands of yellow, black and creamy white. In addition their head and hind ends each are bedecked with a pair of black tentacles or filaments that function as sensory organs and give the cats a cool “Which end is which?” sort of look.

“After” — Black Swallowtale butterfly

But you know what’s even cooler than tentacles? Osmeterium! And every swallowtail larva has one.

Consider, if you will, what life is like for a fleshy, slow-moving caterpillar. When confronted by a threat, it can’t fly away—not at this life stage. It can’t lash out with claws or teeth. Shoot, with nosy naturalists prowling around, it can’t even rely on its camouflage colors to keep itself safe.

Enter the osmeterium.

Just behind the head, hidden inside a fleshy lump, this glandular sac gives swallowtail caterpillars a powerful form of defense. When the little cat is disturbed, the small, V-shaped structure rises up from just behind the head, in much the same way Uncle Martin’s antennae rose up out of his head on the old sitcom “My Favorite Martian.” It stays out momentarily, then gradually slips back inside where it will stay until the next threat appears.

A good look at the black swallowtail’s scary osmeterium.

The black swallowtail’s osmeterium is v-shaped and bright orange — just the thing to scare away possible predators. But the defense doesn’t stop there. Thanks to its diet of plants in the parsley family (think dill, carrot, parsnip, cilantro, fennel and, yes, Queen Anne’s lace) the caterpillar’s shocking display is accompanied by a foul odor that reportedly smells like stinky cheese.

A beautiful caterpillar and the promise of a good stink was almost too much good fortune for this girl to comprehend. But, try as I might, I couldn’t get Ryan’s cat to pony up. I’d squeeze, ever so gently; the osmeterium would rise, ever so silently; I’d sniff, ever so … well, you get the picture. But, nope. Nothing. Not even a hint of cheese of any kind.

If you have a garden and grow any of those plants the black swallowtail caterpillar considers food, you may already be acquainted with this species. And you may not be too fond of it. Its prodigious appetite means it can defoliate a plant in only a matter of days. But as we mentioned, it does the same to Queen Anne’s lace, an introduced plant that can run rampant in natural areas if left unchecked.

Anything that eats Queen Anne’s lace is a friend of Ryan’s, and of mine. Keep an eye out for these engaging caterpillars over these next few weeks.

Keep a nose out, too, while you’re at it. And if you find the caterpillar really does smell like stinky cheese, let me know, will you? Thanks, friend!

Read More Good Natured Stories

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  • Good Natured: Airborne Balloons Killing Birds, Turtles, Fish
  • Good Natured: The Curious Case of The Disembodied Bird Head
  • Good Natured: ‘As I Write This, I’m Staring at a Dead Cooper’s Hawk’
  • Good Natured: Snakes Emerging En Masse
  • Good Natured: Drunk on The Heady Smell of Basswood in Bloom
  • Good Natured: Charming House Wren Can Be a Nasty Home-Wrecker
  • Good Natured: Cloud of Pollinators Converge on Kane County Indigo Bushes
  • Good Natured: When Nature’s Wonders Get in Way of Home Improvement
  • Good Natured: Toads Breeding Like Crazy After Wet Spring Weather
  • Good Natured: Mysteries of Nature — The Dried-Up Frog (And More!)
  • Good Natured: Zebra Jumping Spiders Having a Heyday in Kane County
  • Good Natured: Welcome to the Season of Skin Shedding
  • Good Natured: Why The Birds Have Stopped Singing in Kane County, IL
  • Good Natured: Behold the Nighthawk — Youthful Yet Yoda-Like

 

 

 

 

 

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Tags: Black Swallowtales, Butterly, Caterpillar, Good Natured, Kane County, Osmeterium, Papilio polyxenes, Pupae, Stinky Caterpillars, Swallowtale
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