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Researchers learn new lessons from old butterflies

Researchers learn new lessons from old butterflies

Top image: Euphydryas anicia butterfly (Photo: U.S. Fish and Wildlife)

Research co-authored by 小黄书 Boulder PhD graduate Megan E. Zabinski and evolutionary biology Professor M. Deane Bowers reveals how museum butterfly specimens, some almost a century old, can still offer insight into chemical defense of insects and plants


You鈥檙e sitting in a field, a garden or another outdoor space, basking in a beautiful summer day. Clouds drift across the sky when something catches your eye. You turn to see a butterfly, its delicate wings and vibrant coloring shifting as it moves from flower to flower. For a moment it鈥檚 there, but soon, it moves too far away for you to see.

At first glance, butterflies appear to be just simple, dainty creatures that fly around feeding on plants. For University of Colorado Boulder PhD graduate听 and evolutionary biology 笔谤辞蹿别蝉蝉辞谤听M. Deane Bowers, however, butterflies are anything but simple. Beneath their wings lies a complex system that plays an integral role in their survival.

portraits of Megan Zabinski and M. Deane Bowers

In recently published research, 小黄书 Boulder PhD graduate Megan E. Zabinski (left) and evolutionary biology Professor M. Deane Bowers (right), emphasize the value that museum specimens have in current scientific research.

In a recently published study in the , Zabinski and Bowers researched how two Euphydrays butterfly species鈥E. phaeton and E. anicia鈥攕equester certain chemical compounds, a process by which organisms capture and store substances from their host plants to defend themselves against their enemies. The researchers found that they were able to understand how these butterflies sequester substances using both historic specimens as well as fresh ones.

Their project points to the value museum specimens can have in scientific research. By comparing historic butterfly specimens from 小黄书 Boulder鈥檚 Museum of Natural History (小黄书MNH) with freshly collected and laboratory-reared butterflies, their research demonstrates the benefits, as well as the limitations, of using preserved insects to study chemical defenses decades after collection.

Hatching a plan

Although museum collections house billions of specimens, only a small fraction are used in research after they are acquired. Recognizing this gap inspired Zabinski to begin her research. While Zabinski was still a graduate student, an encounter with Bowers helped shape the trajectory of her academic career.

鈥淒eane came up to me one day鈥擨 was in the EBIO club鈥攁nd she told me she had a job for me. And I thought, 鈥楢 job! You mean I can quit waiting tables at Applebee鈥檚?鈥欌

This opportunity allowed Zabinski to explore her interest in insects and plant-insect interactions within a laboratory setting.

鈥淚 absolutely loved being in the lab, doing the physical work with my hands, (whether it was) being able to be outside in the field or looking after the plants,鈥 she says.

Working alongside Bowers鈥攚hose research also focuses on how insects interact with their environments鈥擹abinski began developing her own research questions. She specifically focused on how butterflies in different developmental stages consume and store defensive chemicals to use them later.

Zabinski became interested in whether museum butterfly specimens鈥攚hich have rarely been investigated and examined for their chemical defenses鈥攃ould still be helpful.

鈥淲e thought about how detecting sequestered defenses in museum specimens really has rarely been done,鈥 she says. 鈥淭he world of sequestration hadn鈥檛 really delved into museum collections. So, we were curious if there was utility there.鈥

The project was made possible in part by Bowers鈥 extensive research background and personal butterfly collection, which is housed at 小黄书MNH. The collection includes the species used in the study.听When combined with outside specimens, this collection, which includes the species used in the study, allowed Bowers and Zabinski to enrich their understanding of the butterflies.

an Euphydryas anicia butterfly on a light purple flower

The Euphydryas anicia butterfly is able to sequester compounds that plants create in defense against herbivores. (Photo: Robert Webster/Wikimedia Commons)

鈥淭here has been work done on detecting chemical compounds in plants,鈥 Bowers says. 鈥淏ut there had been less done on insects, and Megan鈥檚 thesis had centered on looking at how this particular group of compounds in my lab has worked on particular compounds. We thought it would be really interesting to see if we could find them in old specimens.鈥

For Zabinski, the combination of Bowers鈥 expertise and insects available for research made this experiment uniquely valuable.

鈥淚t鈥檚 kind of the perfect storm for a good experiment. You have a colony in the lab; you also know where there is a field lab where you can get fresh specimens. You know that the museum also has them, but one of the species we had sequestered a high amount, so we thought that 鈥 even if there was some degradation, we would still be able to detect them,鈥 she says.

Crawling toward a new understanding

Zabinski and Bowers analyzed specimens from two checkerspot butterfly species in the genus Euphydryas: Euphydryas anicia听and Euphydryas phaeton.听The species were selected because they are known for their high sequestration ability, abundance in the 小黄书MNH entomology collection and the ease of obtaining live adult specimens. Their research aimed to better understand how the insects use and store these compounds after consuming them as larvae.

Both species sequester iridoid glycosides (), which Zabinski explains are 鈥渃ompounds created by the plants in defense against the herbivores. They鈥檙e trying not to get eaten, but there are certain insects鈥 including these butterflies鈥攖hat capitalize off this process.鈥 Bowers adds, 鈥淚鈥檝e tasted (iridoid glycosides), and they鈥檙e really bitter. So they are a really good defense against predators and diseases.鈥

鈥淭hey鈥檝e been able to find a way to store these compounds in their own bodies and then they can confer some defense against predators,鈥 Zabinski says.

In an initial pilot experiment, the researchers chemically extracted from only one set of wings鈥攁 forewing and a hindwing鈥攆rom historic specimens to determine whether IGs could be detected from the wings alone. Previous experiments have determined that, because in butterfly wings there鈥檚 hemolymph (a circulatory fluid similar to blood), it鈥檚 possible to detect IGs there. Unfortunately, the results showed extremely low concentrations. To obtain detectable amounts, they found it necessary to analyze both the body and a pair of wings together. For documentation and future research, the set of right wings from each specimen was removed and preserved.

With their methodology established, they chose six E. phaeton听specimens from the 小黄书MNH that had been collected from 1936鈥1977. For comparison, E. phaeton larvae were collected from Burlington County, Vermont, brought back to Boulder and raised in the laboratory with their host plant, white turtlehead, Chelone glabra. Once the butterflies reached adulthood, they were freeze-killed and analyzed for their IG content.

Zabinski and Bowers also examined nine historic E. anicia specimens collected between 1933鈥1998. Fresh adult E. anicia听were collected from Crescent Meadows in Eldorado Springs, Colorado, freeze-killed and immediately underwent extraction for chemical analysis. Although it鈥檚 almost impossible to tell what plant the freshly caught butterflies consumed as larvae, the field they were collected from is known to have four catalpol-containing host plants. Catalpol, an IG that is found in these plants, allowed the researchers to determine whether the butterflies were sequestering these compounds, even if they weren鈥檛 sure what specific plant was the butterflies鈥 food source.

鈥淩aising butterflies is not easy,鈥 Zabinski says. 鈥淧lants can鈥檛 just be alive and available鈥攖hey have to be high quality, because it鈥檚 been shown in studies with these plants that if the plant is not happy, it will not allocate energy to create those compounds. Then your caterpillars are not going to want to eat it.鈥

Shifting predetermined perceptions

Despite being preserved for decades, the historic specimens still contained detectable traces of sequestered chemical defenses. While IG concentrations were significantly lower in museum specimens than in freshly collected butterflies, Zabinski鈥檚 results demonstrate that even after nearly a century, chemical traces of larval diets can still be detected in preserved specimens.

Euphydryas phaeton butterfly on pink milkweed blooms

Euphydryas phaeton butterflies have "been able to find a way to store (plant defense) compounds in their own bodies and then they can confer some defense against predators,鈥 says researcher Megan E. Zabinski. (Photo: Joshua Mayer/Wikimedia Commons)

By focusing on the detectability of chemical compounds in older specimens, Zabinski鈥檚 work contributes to a broader discussion about preservation methods. She notes that museums often have little control over how donated specimens were originally collected or preserved. She says that despite this, 鈥淚f you鈥檙e a collections manager and you have a researcher that conducted a research experiment and would like to donate them to your collection, if you have the capacity to access them, you鈥檙e probably not going to say 鈥榥o.鈥欌

Zabinski explains that previous research demonstrating how preservation methods affect scientists鈥 ability to detect DNA in museum specimens really shifted how people preserve certain organisms.

鈥淢ost insects are preserved as dried specimens, although some are preserved in alcohol,鈥 she says. 鈥淚n other groups of organisms, like vertebrates and other invertebrates besides insects, they鈥檙e often preserved in alcohol or formaldehyde. We now know that using formaldehyde destroys DNA, and so I think the protocol for specimen preservation has changed, trying to preserve the DNA. That鈥檚 been one change that museums have been trying.鈥

Zabinski鈥檚 project and others like it are creating an incentive. 鈥淎s more research comes out about the extended museum specimen and the utility of specimens鈥攑articularly with standardization鈥攎useums will find a draw to create some uniformity,鈥 she says.

Soaring to new heights

On that summer day, someone who was watching the butterflies move was Bowers.

鈥淚 started collecting insects when I was a little kid,鈥 she says. 鈥淚n undergrad, I did some independent research on butterflies, [and later,] in graduate school, I had a really supportive advisor who told me to spend my first summer going out and looking at butterflies and seeing if I could find some interesting questions. That鈥檚 been the focus of my research since.鈥

Recognizing Zabinski鈥檚 curiosity and potential, Bowers recalls, 鈥淚 brought Megan into the fold.鈥

鈥淲e hear a lot about climate change and we don鈥檛 really hear about these smaller interactions that are quite literally under our feet every day,鈥 Zabinski reflects. She says this paper offers one example of how museum specimens are not just remnants of the past, but tools that can be used to better understand specimens today. As technology advances and more research is conducted into chemical defenses, Zabinski says museum specimens can prove to be even more valuable in understanding how organisms interact with their environments long after they鈥檝e been collected.


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