Arrow-right Camera
The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Study: Butterflies follow UV light

Los Angeles Times

Monarch butterflies making their annual migration from the eastern United States to winter residences in Mexico’s Sierra Madre mountain range find their way by following a three-dimensional map made of rays of polarized ultraviolet light, according to a new study.

Though UV light is invisible to humans, to butterflies it appears as a grid in the sky that emanates from the sun, the researchers reported this week in the journal Neuron.

As the sun travels from east to west across the sky, so does the grid. To compensate, the butterflies use an internal clock that recalibrates the grid throughout the day so they can travel in a straight line, said Dr. Steven Reppert, a professor of neurobiology at the University of Massachusetts Medical School and co-author of the study.

Reppert and his colleagues knew the butterflies used polarized light to navigate, but they weren’t sure it was from the ultraviolet portion of the spectrum. Their suspicions were confirmed when they put the insects in a barrel-size flight simulator and used a plastic filter to block UV light. The butterflies could still see, but they just flew around in circles.