Fly away to the Amazon at new butterfly exhibit - Action News
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Fly away to the Amazon at new butterfly exhibit

Experience the life cycles of these vibrant insects and the importance of a butterfly's impact on the ecosystem at the Vancouver Aquarium from May to September.

Thousands of tropical butterflies on display at Vancouver Aquarium

Andrea Cotter, assistant curator for the Amazon exhibit, examines a Giant Owl butterfly during the opening of the new butterfly feature at the Vancouver Aquarium in Vancouver, British Columbia on Tuesday, May 14, 2019. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

A banded orange heliconian, blue morpho and a doris longwingare amongthe 80 species of butterflies brought from Costa Rica to the Vancouver Aquarium for an exhibit thatrecreates a South Americanrainforest.

The last time a butterfly exhibit was featured at the aquarium was in 2014. After positive reviews and a growing demand from members and visitors, the aquarium decided to bring them back.

A curious butterfly flutters around a visitor at the Vancouver Aquarium. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Until September,visitors will have a chance to view the life cycle of the butterflies from pupa the stage when a caterpillar becomes a chrysalis to adult stage.

Each week, 25-30 new species will arrive from a butterfly farm in Costa Rica.

Many of the butterflies found in Costa Rica rangedown to the Amazon rainforest.

A Inverse Longwing butterfly sits on a flower. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Two new chambers have been built in the enclosure where aquarium visitors can viewwhere the pupa transform into adult butterflies.

Themetamorphosis of a butterfly consists of four stages:egg, larva, pupa and adult. The pupa stage,also known as the chrysalis stage, is when the larva transforms inside of a hard shell and emerges as an adult butterfly. The pupa stagecan last from five to21 days.

Andrea Cotter, assistant curator for the Amazon exhibit, examines a butterfly during the opening of the new butterfly feature at the Vancouver Aquarium in Vancouver, British Columbia on Tuesday, May 14, 2019. (Ben Nelms/CBC)
A Blue Morpho makes a tripod its home during the opening of the new exhibit that will run until September. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

The diet of a butterfly consists of nectar and fruit that are readily available in the gallery enclosure. Ibises, sloths and tortoisesco-exist with the butterflies to simulate their natural environment in the Amazon.

Visitors duck out of the way as a huge Blue Morpho makes its way around the gallery. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Although touching the sensitive insects is prohibited,many of the butterflies perching on branches and fruit stay still long enough for visitors to get an up close look at the beautiful patterns and vivid colours the butterflies use to blend into theirsurroundings.

The pattern of a Giant Owl butterfly mimics the eye of its namesake to scare off predators. (Ben Nelms/CBC)
Andrea Cotter examines a Swallowtail butterfly. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

The species of butterfliesfeatured at the exhibit vary in size and colour, from the hand-sized blue morpho to the smaller golden heliconian

The last time a butterfly exhibit was featured at the aquarium was in 2014. After positive reviews and a growing demand from members and visitors, the aquarium decided to bring it back. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

The lifespan of the adult butterflies ranges from a few days to a couple of weeks. With more than 600 to 800 individual butterflies arriving each month, there are many specimens available for viewing.