Monarch chrysalis parasitized by two pupal parasitoids
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- Опубликовано: 15 окт 2024
- To see these parasitoids emerge from a monarch chrysalis, check out this video: • Pteromalus cassotis pa...
This video documents an interaction between a monarch butterfly (as a "J" and as a chrysalis) and two parasitoid wasps. The parasitoids are called Pteromalus cassotis. The monarch was able to defend itself when in the J stage by knocking the tiny wasps off of its body. However, as a chrysalis, the monarch is relatively unable to defend itself, especially as it hardens and loses the ability to wiggle. Relatively inactive portions of the video have been edited out for the sake of brevity. Total elapsed time: 2 hours, 20 minutes. This video was shot in the University of Minnesota Monarch Lab.
Music: The Life and Death of a Certain K. Zabriskie, Patriarch by Chris Zabriskie is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (creativecommon...)
Source: chriszabriskie....
Artist: chriszabriskie....
Story time, a while back, I found a chrysalis, I wanted to see inside of it, so sadly I took it down and opened it with some small tools. I opened the chrysalis, and it was filled with countless tiny larvae. I was baffled and was amazing at what I was looking at, I further opened the chrysalis to see more larvae. For days I tried researching what was in the chrysalis, and I started to doubt if it was a chrysalis in the first place (because I’m no insect person). But finally after around 6 weeks I randomly stumbled upon this video. This video answered my question to what those larvae where doing in a chrysalis. Thank you so much for solving my suspicions. Great video.
I raised 13 monarchs in my house 3 years ago and 2 got bitten by the parasitoids. I must have brought the nasty parasitoid in when I brought in fresh milweed for the caterpillars to eat. So heartbreaking when this happens and a tiny worm pops out and hangs from the chryalis. Very disturbing to see how vulnerable monarchs are.
Denise Brown
6 years ago
those are tachinid flies........
Sometimes the wasps are beneficial. But when it comes to them killing monarchs, squish that bug!
I hate seeing this. I know it happens in the wild but this is inside of a carrier so we don't need to see the caterpillar in turmoil.
Debbie Quintero
We must see it to learn from it.
It's for educational purposes :P but yea, I get what you're saying
forget it lol. rude
Grow up please
he needed youtube content
Kids, this is why you don't skip sit-ups during gym class.
siresly were not even insects these pariliz insects only do that on old day catapilars
At that time,he is more like a 12th grader. If we match ages with caterpillars.
is why you dont let someone lock you up with 2 parasitic insects in the same room
Amen. Step 1, lock your doors so no criminals like these jokers get in.
Step 2, do your crunches daily so if the locks fail, youre still sittin pretty w a six pack...
Cuz you know, an awesome six pack is all it takes to keep the predators away. Isnt that right Hollywood?
@@kittycatlover5610
1. Your grammar sucks
2. Shut the fuck up
3. Grow up
4. Eat dirt
Why have monarchs in your possession if you won't protect them?
Diane Godbout oh you think we should spray pesticides on chrysalis, and how do we know these thing coming in to kill them, they are very tiny to see, I am raising 25 monarchs myself
Stephanie Lane we have reared over 200 Monarchs this year from egg to butterfly and we have lost exactly 2 both due to a caterpillar attacking a “J”
It’s all about nature and the stupidity of humans who destroy their only food source (milk weed) we go near and far to find milk weed and also grow our own. The ones we find we wash with a bleach water rinse. No parasites passing from the leaves
@Silva Silva777 Is science, you always hating on people because of your stupid way to defend animals, people like you defend any shit instead of real agression to animals
You guys have been very harsh with him. Let's just say that this video looks kinda BS to me because this experiment has already been done. We already know how it works and tbh this looks like kinda a free and purposeless horrible death for that poor butterfly... It doesn't really look like science to me. Then again, I won't cry for a butterfly.
@@Ph34121307 Anyway only one experiment is not enough to learn about the parasite, if we want to protect this butterflies we most study this parasite and find a way to prevent extincion and at the same time, don't cause to the wasps any problem or ar least control the number
the poor Monarchs never get a break!
I remember seeing what I thought was a small fly in the room one day.
That cute little chubby cat did put up a good fight early.
Cool video hope to see one with a house fly laying eggs on the pupa next video
Fun fact: the butterfly can still develop under the right chances.
Where do the adult wasps live when not infecting a chrysalis? Do they live in the soil? I'm curious because I have an indoor enclosure to raise monarch butterflies and I bring in 1 gallon pots of milkweed to feed my caterpillars. I've never seen them indoors but have recently found them in my outdoor enclosure that I raise my swallowtail butterflies in. Thanks for your help.
too bad the monarch chrysalis shell is not tough enough to protect them.
this where I'd get the boot or flamethrower because if I can't have the butterfly so can't the parasite either!
Very interesting video.
geez im so lucky Im not a catapilar cuz if I was the one pupaiting and that guy came along I would of been swift
I hate how everyone is like "oh my god, why would you do this to a perfectly good caterpillar, it was so healthy!"
It's called education kids. Life isn't pretty, and this is one of those things that aren't pretty. Get over it.
Also I bet if it was a parasite sucking on a roach larva you would all be happy for it so stfu. This is how life is, and this person just wants to educate people
Shade That Demon Cat Roaches don't have larvae 😂
Well, arguing with snowflakes are like reasoning with earthworms.
This is brilliantly horrible. Did you HAVE to put that menacing music with it? Just kidding. Your vide is fabulous. I will share it on my page. Monarch Butterfly Crusader.
FYI, chrysalises harden for 15-30 minutes up to a few hours.
This is saddistic and awful to sacrifice that poor caterpillar!!
I was always told that this parasitoid attacks once the caterpillar is in a chrysalis. You just proved this is not the case.
9:06 the black part is the monster
I'm so sad to see this happening. I'm trying to help with the Monarchs outside but see now why One never got to the Chrysalis, only part way. Something killed it. I've been waiting for over 14 day's to see 2 that did make it to Chrysalis but now doubt they're going to become Butterflies. So sad. My Milkweed plants R doing great N plenty of egg's are making it to full Catapillars. I've seen a few bird's around N lizard's, but didn't think about other bug's. Any suggestions? I can't do it indoors. I'm trying to help! I'm in San Diego CA USA.
for your milkweeds you post to check for small bugs with a 🔍and then bring it inside away from other animals in also love monarch caterpillar🐛I find them cute.
You just need about 15 potted milkweed plants in 1 gallon pots and need a simple 60 sized screen cage that you can put the small caterpillars on.
But that's after you collect the fresh eggs from the plants out in the wild and keep them in small container until they start to emerge, then put them on the well protected plants.
It's really the only way to do it anymore with all the dangers that oppose them.
I didn't know that Monarchs were aware enough to knock the wasps off. Are most caterpillars that aware?
Positron Decay
Its a subconscious thing. All living things do that. It’s like you feel something on your arm and you either shake it or hit it.
I notice that the lady wasps prefer that spot near the base of the caterpillar's underside. Is there a particular advantage to injecting the eggs and virus where the caterpillar can easily bop them off?
Had to mute the annoying ass music but other than that it was cool
Yeah, sorry about that :)
The music seems to be in sync of what's happening in the video in a few instances though, and it has that 'something bad is coming' sound too, which is what's happening.
The chub you chase LMAO
I just noticed the video page url has the word "cats" at the end.
Next time I will put a protective nylon stocking over the caterpillar as soon as I see them hanging and attached to the top of the aquarium to protect them from getting bit
I live in Florida and I just started raising Monarchs on my porch. I have two chrysalis. On one of them I found something black attached. How I would know is that wasp? I didn't see any flying bugs I took picture of it. I had so many, most of them end up dying. I’m wondering WHY??? It is heartbreaking. How can I protect them. Mr. Carl Stenoien please help. Which kind of protective nylon stocking and where I can get it?
@@victorialucci6163 Just buy the kind of nylon stockings women use.
How did those wasps get in there? I raise mine indoors and I have no such thing. Was this an experiment? Sad to see.
ok but WHY would you keep the chrysalis in there with the wasps? they are ENDANGERED and need literally all the help they can get.. i raised 11 in a cage and only 4 were even released as butterflies....
I thought when the caterpillar was removing its skin I thought the insect killed it.
just feels like a constant itch.....
Carl Stenoien I've been wanting to know this for years, but do you know if these little wasps will still infect a fresh pupa after it had already been infected by a Tachinid fly, and also, can a Monarch still survive if it only had 1 or 2 eggs injected in it from one of these wasps, being that they're so small? Thanks for your time.
Great questions! Under lab conditions, the wasps do not seem to discriminate between tachinid-parasitized and non-parasitized hosts, though I have not conducted (not am I aware of) any large-scale experiments to address this question. To your second question, monarchs sometimes survive parasitism attempts by these wasps in lab experiments, and it may be related to the number of eggs placed by the parasitoid. In other closely related species of parasitoids and butterfly hosts, experimentally shortened oviposition bouts of ~1 hour or less increases the chances of butterfly survival.
The intelligence of humankind: letting nature take its course a species into extinction.
I hate that they did this to a healthy monarch cat!!!! 😹😹😹😹😹😹😹
Sandy Blanket I agree. Makes me sad to see this
Sandy Blanket you mean caterpillar .
its what happens in nature and its for documentation on what it does
Sandy Blanket meow!
It’s a little upsetting but if it’s only I’ll be little happy only one died to these monsters
9:08 i would like more information on what happened there, it's so horrifying
is that the caterpillar's shriveled body falling off?!
how did it become like that (I see it gradually getting more and more shriveled)
did the wasps feed off it? Was it actually metamorphosing but died because it was outside its chrysalis?
That’s the caterpillar turning into a chrysalis and shedding the old caterpillar skin. That is their normal development.
This is why plastic critter cages are not safe for raising cats. Those little wasps and ants can easily get into the cage through the slots in the lid. I think the wasp can smell the cats too. I have had T-flys hanging out on the outside of my kitchen window screens near where I keep some of my cages.
Did this Monarch survived ? or died trapped ?
I live in Florida and I just started raising Monarchs on my porch. I have two chrysalis. On one of them I found something black attached. How I would know is that wasp? I didn't see any flying bugs I took picture of it. I had so many, most of them end up dying. I’m wondering WHY??? It is heartbreaking. How can I protect them. Mr. Carl Stenoien please help.
You just need a big rectangular (4'x3'x4' ish) cage built with 2x2 pieces of wood with double layered netting from Walmart , its 97cents a yard, so you can afford to even triple layer it because it's so cheap and it will definitely keep everything out. It doesn't have to be pretty, just has to be completely sealed. It's better to collect the eggs early and keep them in containers until the hatch and then put them on the plants that are inside the cage, or have potted plants out in the open and when they have a few eggs on them, move the whole pot inside the cage for protection, but you must have a mini broom to sweep off the pot entirely, especially under the rim or handles, don't let any spider hitch a ride in that cage. There's some maintenance involved, but this will give you a 99% success rate in raising them, your only concern will be making sure you don't run out of milkweed. I mean you're pretty much flipping the success rate of these guys around with a double, triple layered screen/netting cage, so your milkweed will go very fast.
Why do you raise pest
cat player said if you ants keep missing with me I'm going to sleep!
Don't you have enough information before this experiment to avoid this again? I didn't finish watching it except in short parts because the pain and destruction was seemingly dragged out for a long amount of time. I still am already vigilent over my new crew of cats at our house protecting them and hoping for the best without needing any sort of video or report to guide me. I prefer the videos that post how to RAISE and help them survive.
Chill, they need to study this, it's important
Thank you very much
0:40 Yeet
Lol, ya!
He felt the tiny antenna touch him, they are very sensitive!
Can someone explain to me what’s going on?
Nevermind.
I saw one of those on my Gulf Fritillary chrysalis today. How can I keep them away?
The wasps can fit through regular window screen, so you must rear them in containers with small air holes or use very fine mesh.
Why you don't save it?
So what happens to the butterfly?
Thank you for Video! Best wishes!
Half way through he should have a 12 pack
Great video, never been able to record that event as it is happening.
How can you protect butterflies from these darn wasps. We had 11 swallowtail chrysalis from last Fall that are now hatching. So far 3 butterflies, 5 wasps and 3 remaining. It has been devastating to watch. The first wasp was from a caterpillar we had indoors since his first instar, so we were stumped when only a wasp emerged.
You have to bring them inside and raise them.
Not so fun fact: the monarch is getting eaten alive when developing inside it's pupa.
I can talk about that in a video. Parasitic wasps.
*in my head*:come on caterpillar fight the thing
I'm hoping this doesn't happen to mine. I don't see a single fly in the cage and it has some good nylon all around. Only time will tell I guess
cat player said no that's my skin and get off!!!!
Did you know before the video was taken that this was going to happen? Great video, although I am sorry for butterfly that did not make it. My kids enjoying watching it. This is our first summer raising monarchs, and the kids have learned A LOT about monarchs.
+Kelly Hoerter I did know that this would likely happen. I set up this video in a 1 cubic foot cage in our lab. I study interactions between monarchs and these parasitoids as a graduate student researcher at the University of Minnesota. Keep learning guys!
Bruh chill, people need to know this, and this happens all the time in the wild
@Silva Silva777 Yeah, we should ban all research and just let the wasps wipe out monarchs
fuck the cistem
@@CarlStenoien and it's cruel!!! It's bad enough their numbers are dangerously low let alone you killing them on purpose for your classroom!!!
@@majinbuu345 people already know this, and this species has been declining rapidly for years. Such a waste.
So this is not a chalcid wasp? I know that the larva will eat the non-essential parts of the monarch chrysalis. As I observe the wasp and the location it chooses to oviposit, it appears that the abdomen is the area of choice. I’m going to deduce from this, that the part of the monarch chrysalis with the most non-essential parts is located in the abdomen. True? False?
Great video.
It is, there are many variations out there. I had some thst looked like fruit flies (without a bee head shape).
caterpie still evolving and hasn't learned harden yet lul
Poor caterpillar just died for bad due to the parasites.
Why there’s flys on a chrysails 12:18
And then the crystail become brown and wasp larvae eating inside the crystail
Why The Man Didnt Help it
8:18 It really did put up a fight.
I would love to see one with flies deposit eggs on the Monarch next video
Monarch should have used his teeth on those buggers
They set him up for failure.
This is sad man
ant said sick!
Im here for the snow flakes
It never snows over here -_-
I want to see the result
Boo. Wheres the ending?
0:04-0:40 This caterpillar has taught us fhe most valuable lesson of all. KIDS, DO YOUR CRUNCHES. Itll pay off when the thug bugs move into the neighborhood.
let's play i'm you and go away ants!!--catplar
Poor caterpillar
Also, i like the music. I understand it annoying some but the 80s feel mixed with the postmodern vibe of a caterpillar being predated on is the perfect backdrop.
Why didn't you do something! There's a shortage of monarchs these days!
??? This is a lab experiment to see what happens when you mix the two. If you interfere, you mess your experiment up
Steven Preston, We already know what happens and it’s devastating to the monarchs. They shouldn’t need to purposely allow it to happen for a video. We should be trying save and protect every monarch caterpillar we can.
If you touch the wasps, they may might sting you.
PenFTW the Necrozma 2007, if you don't know what you are talking about, don't talk at all. This wasp hasn't got a stinger, it is a parasitoid.
@@dontask2421 oh.
Awww. :(
Reminds me of the final scene of Alien: Covenant
0:37 lol BEGONE ANT 😂
That's me trying to do one sit up
0:25 0:40 the bug tried to get the Caterpillar
This is plain cruel 😢 🤨
At 9:0 pupi starts belly dance😂
Going on right now...
Where are you located, Debbie? Would you be willing to share details with me via email? I'm compiling geographic records of parasitism (as well as other details) to try to learn more about this interaction.
i see a Ant
逆さまってかなりの勇気ですよね。😅💡
Nature is beautifully cruel
This is hard to watch.
oh my god!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Why would u do that? And also what happend next? 😂
Don't f----- with your mother nature!
I kind a hope that the person that film this ends up getting a parasite in their brain
Here we have the Food Stamp recepient wasp
This is how life is kids, and accept it..
except if there are no pizza rolls
Its so sad
Show
Sad.
🐛
9:11 I can now see some infected parts
bagus 😊😊