Save the Karner Blue Butterfly
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The Karner Blue Butterfly (Lycaeides melissa samuelis) is a beautiful little blue butterfly with a problem.
The only host plant for Karner Blue caterpillars, the wild blue lupine (Lupinus perennis), is declining in numbers, and the population of Karner Blues is declining with them. Karner Blues have been on the federal endangered species list since 1992.
- Karner Blue Butterfly
Visual aids to identification - Nature Conservancy - Rhapsody in Blue
For most of the year, the Karner blue butterfly exists as a tiny, dimpled white egg. - Sing Your Purple Song
I am quietly sitting in a sandy opening, surrounded by the pretty leaves and massed lavender flowers of wild lupine.
The Lifecycle of the Karner Blue
Karner Blue Butterflies were discovered and named by lepidopterist Vladimir Nabokov, a Russian emigre better known for his literary achievements, including his notorious masterpiece, Lolita.
They have an unusual life cycle, with two breeding cycles per year. Karner Blue eggs overwinter on lupine plants, hatching into tiny larvae who feed on the plants before forming chrysalises and emerging as butterflies in late May. The adults are short-lived - only about 7-10 days - but they lay more eggs on the lupines,which hatch and produce another batch of butterflies in late July or August. The second batch lays more eggs, which wait through the winter before starting the cycle all over again.
Range of the Karner Blues
Karner Blues once lived in a narrow band from Minnesota to Maine.The largest remaining population exists in Wisconsin, where they can be locally quite common in some areas. Smaller populations survive in Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, and New York, and the butterflies have been reintroduced with some success to Ohio and New Hampshire. They are believed extinct in Iowa, Illinois, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, Maine, and Ontario.
Karner Blues follow the lupines... and the prime habitat of lupines is in sandy oak savannahs, pine barrens, dry prairies, and cleared forest areas. Unfortunately, thanks to fire suppression policies, agriculture, and development, prime lupine habitats are vanishing.
Conservation groups and the government are currently working with private landowners and other groups in an attempt to restore prime lupine habitat. Gardeners can also take part in the effort.
Prairie Butterfly Gardening
- Attracting Butterflies With Prairie Plants
Whether you live on an acreage or a small city lot, it's easy to attract butterflies to your garden with native prairie plants.
Creating a Karner Blue Garden
The best way to attract Karner Blue Butterflies is to plant lots of lupine. Fortunately, lupine is an exceptionally beautiful wildflower. It also happens to be a beneficial nitrogen-fixing legume that will improve your soil as well as filling your yard with blooms.
Lupines require dry, sandy soils and full to partial sun, without too much competition from shrubs or tall grasses. They spread quickly under favorable conditions. The Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources offers a useful factsheet (PDF) on growing wild lupine.
Gardeners can imitate or restore pine barrens, oak savannahs, and dry prairies on a small scale by planting a variety of trees, shrubs, wildflowers, and grasses. Karner Blues like "edge" habitat, with a mix of shade and sun and a diverse mix of plantings. Native pines, oaks, and berry or nut producing shrubs are good choices, as are native grasses and wildflowers.
A rich variety of wildflowers is especially important because adult Karner Blues, unlike larva, are not picky at all about their choice of food. The more variety, the better when choosing nectar plants. Although Karner Blues are known to enjoy both native and non-native flowers, most seem to prefer native wildflowers.
Prairie Nursery offers a wildflower mix especially for Karner Blues that includes Butterflyweed, Leadplant, Aster, Blazingstar, Harebell, Cream False Indigo, and Purple Prairie Clover, as well as lupine.
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Great Hub you have here :) Please check out my Belfast Maine website would love to network!
What a pity...
Great hub!
Great hub!
Very informative hub. so glad people are willing to come to the aid of our natural creatures. May be you would like to see my hubs on England's wildlife . Keep up the good work
What are ways thet we can help save the karner blue butterfly?? It would be a very interesting topic to learn aboutt :)
The Karen Blue butterfly is a very interesting animal I say we do every thing to protect it!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
i like chips
Beautiful little butterfly! I hope we can save these little beauties.
This info is so useful!! I'm using it in my report ya know?? Hope we could save these inspiring creatures...
I really wish we can save this beautiful animals
i have to do a report on this butterfly. I hope we can help protect these beautiful butterflies.
Wow. Such a lovely butterfly. It seems like a flower on another flower.
wow.nice pic. i've never imagined that the life of such a beautiful creature is at stake. lets do whatever we can to save it.
Interesting, I've heard of the Karner Blue before, thanks for filling in the details.
Ben
why should we save the butterfly??
You say that Karner blues can only use Lupinus perennis. However, others say that they can use other species of lupines, native and non-native. Can you give me a little more information, please?













pjdscott 3 years ago
How alarming that we're in danger of loosing such a beautiful creature. I read your well-written hub with interest, and can only hope that people follow your example by planting suitable gardens.
What about alerting local authorities to this - could they plant parks and open spaces with more lupine and wildflowers?