Caterpillars
are nice, quiet little animals to watch. They’re not smelly,
they don’t make much noise, and they’re easy and cheap
to feed. Watch long enough, and you may see the caterpillar spin
a cocoon. Will it emerge as a moth or a butterfly? To find out,
you’ll have to keep the cocoon outdoors in a safe place
until metamorphosis (changing from one form to another) is complete.
To keep your cocoon safe, you really need some kind of cage.
Glass jars don’t work very well: they get wet and smelly
inside, and they can break. But with a little work and some help
from a responsible adult, you can make the very best bug cage.
Before you put any captured animal in a cage, you must promise
to look after it—every day if you have to. Keep this promise
to the animal. Otherwise, let it go where you found it.
With caterpillars, you can use this cage upside-down so the
bucket-lid is the base. First, watch the caterpillar in the wild
to see what kind of leaves it eats. Then only feed it fresh leaves
of that kind. Caterpillars eat a lot and should have fresh leaves
and a clean cage at all times. Put about six leafy twigs in a
small jar partly filled with water. Put crumpled paper around
the twigs to keep the caterpillar from falling in the water.
Once the caterpillar starts to spin its cocoon, watch, but don’t
touch: vibration will upset it. When the cocoon appears finished,
you can do some housekeeping: pour out the water, throw away the
extra leafy twigs, and let the twig with the cocoon dry out. Some
caterpillars will insist on spinning their cocoon on the cage
walls or windows, but that’s okay.
At this point, you should move the cage to a dry, safe, sheltered
outdoor place. Dry is important, so is the normal outdoor temperature.
Otherwise, your moth or butterfly might hatch much too soon, before
there are any flowers with nectar on which to feed.
Look into the cage every day to see if anything has emerged.
Trying to wait and watch long enough to see the actual emergence
of the insect will test your patience. It will be worth it, however,
when you get to release your beautiful moth or butterfly into
the spring sunshine.
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