Karner Blue Butterfly Conservation Iniative
Picture of the Karner Blue Butterfly
Photo Courtesy of New Hampshire Deptartment of Fish and Game

About the Butterfly Conservation Initiative
In an effort to bring these "flying flowers" back from the brink of extinction, the American Zoo and Aquarium Association (AZA) formed the Butterfly Conservation Initiative (BFCI) in June of 2002. As one of the BFCI's founding members and continual supporters, Roger Williams Park Zoo is working with zoos and environmental organizations across the country, and right here in New England, to give butterflies a fighting chance.

The BFCI is designed to bring together non-governmental organizations and government agencies to aid the recovery of imperiled butterflies in North America. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the National Wildlife Federation and the Xerces Society have signed on to take part in the BFCI, in addition to over 40 AZA institutions.
Link to Butterfly Conservation Initiative Web page

Overview: Roger Williams Park Zoo and the Karner Blue Butterfly
The Karner Blue Butterfly, Lycaeides melissa samuelis, is on the verge of extinction.  Since 2002, Roger Williams Park Zoo (RWPZ) staff has been working with the United States Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) and the New Hampshire Department of Fish and Game (NHFG) on a habitat restoration project to reintroduce the butterflies back into the wild. 

RWPZ has been active on this front in two ways.  First, our Horticultural Department has annually provided 200 lupine plants, the butterfly’s sole food source, and replant them in New Hampshire.  Secondly, in 2005, RWPZ started rearing the larva of the endangered butterfly to then be released at the habitat restoration site in Concord, New Hampshire, a 40-acre restoration site.  RWPZ successfully hatched and reared to pupae over 200 Karner Blue eggs to date.

Karner Blue Project Update - as of April 2008
supplied by the NH Fish and Game Deptartment

  • Over 265 acres of land was secured for management to improve and create habitat for the federally endangered Karner blue butterfly (L. m. samuelis).
  •  An additional 100+ acres of unmanageable land remain as open space and serve as a buffer for the managed habitat.
  • 40 acres of Brontosaurus clearing and prescribed burns totaling 59.65 acres have been conducted in an effort to restore and manage the pine barrens for native vegetation and create sunny openings for wild blue lupine (Lupinus perennis) the sole larval host plant for the Karner blue butterfly.
  • 9811 lupine plants and 454,920 lupine seeds have been planted in the restoration area to create habitat for L. m. samuelis larvae.  In addition, 867 seedlings and over 50,900 seeds of native flowers for adult nectaring have been planted.  All seeds were collected by hand from the remnant patches of native vegetation within the management area.
  • Since 2001 over 7034 Karner blue butterflies have eclosed from the captive breeding program, 4291 of those adults were released into the restored pine barrens habitat.

About the Karner Blue Butterfly
The Karner Blue is a beautiful, blue butterfly with a wing span of only about one inch. Historically found in 12 northern states and in Ontario, Canada, the Karner blue can now only be found in Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, New Hampshire, Ohio, New York, and Wisconsin.

Like most endangered or threatened butterflies, the Karner blue's decline can be attributed to a loss of habitat. The larva of the Karner blue feeds exclusively on the wild lupine plant (Lupinus perennis) - without it, the young of the species cannot survive to adulthood.

Typically found in savanna and barren habitats with dry sandy soils, wild lupine is now itself a threatened species, found only in small amounts on military bases, airports, by the roadside and in some forestlands. As a result of industrial and agricultural development the habitat required by wild lupine has been nearly destroyed, and with it, the Karner blue's ability to survive.

Twenty years ago there were an estimated 2,000 to 3,000 Karner blue butterflies in the Concord Pine Barrens area. By 1995, that number had plummeted to less than 50, because of the coinciding decline of wild lupine in the area.

Finding a solution through collaboration

The solution, then, was clear - restore and expand wild lupine populations to support a healthy Karner Blue butterfly population. Since the spring of 2002, Roger Williams Park Zoo staff has participated in New Hampshire's ongoing habitat restoration project for the Karner blue in Concord, initiated by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) and New Hampshire Fish and Game (NHFG).  

On May 23rd- May 24th, 2006, members of the RWPZ staff traveled to New Hampshire and met with members of the NHFG and the National Wildlife Federation (NWF) to aid in the annual Lupine planting. On July 6, 2006 Lou Perrotti, Conservation Programs Coordinator for the RWPZ, organized a team of staff from Massachusetts Franklin Park Zoo, Stone Zoo, and the Boston Museum of Science, and Connecticut’s Beardsley Zoo, to travel to New Hampshire to join NHFG and RWPZ staff to aid in Lupine seed collecting, and other habitat restoration activities.

The RWPZ staff plans to get these new partner institutions in the New England area involved in growing Lupine at their facilities for the Concord Habitat Restoration effort, starting in 2007. It is this kind of support and collaborative approach that continues to prove to Federal and State wildlife agencies that partnering with zoos greatly enhances habitat and species conservation initiatives.

In recent developments, the New England Conservation Collaborative was formed to explore how to make a greater impact on the region’s environment by forming new partnerships for ongoing conservation efforts.   Learn more.

Contact Information: Louis Perrotti, RWPZ's Conservation Program's Coordinator
1000 Elmwood Avenue
Providence, RI 02907-3659
(401) 785-3510 ext. 335
email: lperrotti@rwpzoo.org

KBB Eggs
Karner Blue Butterfly Eggs

KBB Larva
Larva camouflages well on Lupine leaf

Full Butterfly, Courtesy of R. Miller
Photo courtesy of R. Miller
 
lupineplanting
Lupine f rom RWPZ Horticultural Department
kids planting in NH
Planting Lupine in NH

See video -
Lupine Planting in NH

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