Newport-Mesa on painted lady flight path
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Marisa O’Neil
They’re just passing through, but hordes of butterflies are adding
some black and gold to Orange County this week.
Large clusters of the insects are winging their way north through
Newport-Mesa. The painted lady butterflies, also known as Vanessa
cardui, look like monarch butterflies, only smaller, with 2- to
3-inch wingspans.
It’s a sure sign that spring is here.
“It seems like spring has sprung,” Newport Beach Lifeguard Lt. Jon
Mitchell said Thursday. “The ladybugs and butterflies are out in
force.”
Though the painted ladies make the migration each year, the recent
wet weather led to more of the butterflies than normal, said UC
Irvine biology professor and nature photographer Peter Bryant.
“They breed down in the desert Southwest and Mexico,” Bryant said.
“In a rainy year like this one, there’s a huge production and more
growth of their food plant.”
They lay their eggs and feed on weedy plants like thistle, mallow
and nettles, said Liz Cooper, a member of the North American
Butterfly Assn. The fully-grown butterflies feed on nectar from
flowers.
The painted ladies then fly north to Canada, Bryant said.
The last time the butterflies made such a prolific appearance in
Orange County was in the 1970s, he said.
Their timing serves as a perfect warm-up for the new butterfly
house opening April 17 at the Environmental Nature Center in Newport
Beach, executive director Bo Glover said.
“The migration is good timing for people to get enthused about the
butterfly house,” Glover said.
People have been calling the center to ask about the butterflies
flitting around town, he said.
Those who somehow miss the many painted ladies in the wild will
have a second chance when the butterfly house opens, Glover said.
That variety and seven to 11 other native species are set to hatch by
the time it opens, he said.
* MARISA O’NEIL covers public safety and courts. She may be
reached at (714) 966-4618 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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