By Lani
Jefcoat MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- The Jackson Zoo will play host this summer to
thousands of butterflies in a special six-month
event. The zoo,
with assistance from the Mississippi State University
Extension Service and the Mississippi Agricultural and
Forestry Experiment Station, is preparing a 3,000 square
foot shade-cloth butterfly house. "Butterflies
and moths native to Mississippi will live in the house,"
said Felder Rushing, Hinds County Extension horticulture
agent. "There are 151 types of butterflies native to
Mississippi. The 25 to 30 kinds in the exhibit were chosen
because they are commonly found in Mississippi
gardens." Butterflies
from a meadow outside the house will be added inside the
house in addition to the stocked butterflies. "This
exhibit gives people the opportunity to study plants along
with the butterflies and offers a good plant and flower
demonstration," Rushing said. "Plants depend on the
butterflies for pollination so this is a beneficial
environment for both." Butterflies
live anywhere from a few days to a few weeks. The house will
be stocked each week with chrysalises and young butterflies,
but organizers hope the butterflies will reproduce on the
host plants used in the exhibit. Designers
expect many school children to visit the butterfly house,
and exhibits will give children a chance to see the
different stages of metamorphosis they are learning about in
school. "We want
this effort to take the process to the people and bring more
awareness and interest in the research done by our
Experiment Stations," Rushing said. The
house is 12 feet tall and is covered with an insect netting
to keep the butterflies in and wasps out. Visitors must go
through two doors to get inside the house and there are fans
placed above the doors to blow the butterflies
back. Rushing
custom developed a fog system for the house designed to keep
butterflies and people cool. The house is patterned after
existing butterfly houses, but it is the first to be built
in Mississippi. The
plants in the house were chosen to encourage the
caterpillars to eat the leaves so they grow healthy and
produce beautiful butterflies. Some of the plants for
caterpillars will be sassafras, oak trees, Queen Anne's lace
and fennel. Tomato and cabbage plants for will be available
for worms that turn into beautiful moths. The
flowering plants grown for the butterflies are lantanas,
verbenas, buddleia, pentas and zinnias. The butterflies are
attracted to brightly colored flowers and pollen in the
flowers. All of
the plants used in the butterfly house are from Mississippi
growers. The plants have been part of demonstrations and
trials at Mississippi Experiment Stations to find the
strongest, long blooming flowers that attract
butterflies. "The
more flowers you have, the more butterflies you have,"
Rushing said. Dr. Pat
Harris, Extension entomologist, developed a safe and
effective way to control fire ants without using harsh
chemicals in and around the butterfly house. Dr. Patricia
Knight, assistant horticulturist at the South Mississippi
Experiment Station, and Dr. David Tatum, Extension
horticulturist, assisted in locating plants for the
exhibit. About
150,000 people are expected to attend the exhibit which
opens May 1 at the Jackson Zoo and closes Oct.
31. Released:
April 19, 1999
Home
lawns & gardens news:
State Zoo Opens
Butterfly House
Contact: Felder Rushing, (601) 372-4651
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:29:38
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