It’s hard to miss a giant. In 2010 when the largest butterfly in North America fluttered among Ardys Fisher’s flowers at the end of July, she knew it was something neat. Her husband Lionel snapped some photos and with a little help from the internet and confirmation from VCE, this became the first record of an Eastern Giant Swallowtail in Vermont.
The Vermont Butterfly Survey examined thousands of specimens in museums and published records of butterflies from Vermont to confirm that this was the first sighting recorded in the state. But despite the lack of evidence of previous sightings, it might have visited Vermont about 100 years ago. Samuel Scudder described a prolonged northward invasion of giant swallowtails from the 1870s into the early 1900s, reaching upstate New York and as far north as Montreal. But by the 1930s they apparently faded southward again and were considered to be just a rare vagrant in Massachusetts once again.
From 1991-2008 only two sightings were reported in Massachusetts. Farther south, the Connecticut Butterfly Atlas found none during surveys conducted from 1995-1999 and the 2007 Rhode Island checklist labeled the species “historical.” None were found during the Vermont Butterfly Survey from 2002-2007.
But the Fisher’s 2010 sighting was a bellwether for things to come. In 2011 there was a massive explosion of Eastern Giant Swallowtails throughout the Northeast. Beginning in August and ending with the first frost, sightings were reported from across Vermont and beyond. Incredibly, some were even finding caterpillars.
Eastern Giant Swallowtail caterpillars can feed on just a few plants, mostly in the citrus family (Rutaceae). Farmers in the south call the caterpillars “orange dogs” because of the devastation they can cause in their citrus orchards. But one host plant that grows in some parts of Vermont is Northern Prickly-ash (Zanthoxylum americanum), a shrub that grows in old fields, fencerows, riverbanks, and forest edges, sometimes forming thickets. The traveling swallowtails quickly colonized these new patches.
The caterpillars rely on camouflage, chemistry, and mimicry for protection. Their resemblance to bird droppings hides them and may even deter predators. And when disturbed, mature larvae rapidly extend bright orange and fleshy “horns” hidden within the thoracic segment behind their head called osmeterium. This gland is thought to scare potential predators because it mimics a snake’s tongue. And if that’s not frightening enough, then perhaps the release of noxious defensive chemicals might also help to deter the predator.
With observers finding caterpillars, the butterflies were clearly reproducing–but could they make it through a northern New England winter? If caterpillars could avoid early frost and the chrysalises in which they overwinter were greeted with mild weather, it might be possible. Our network of naturalists was alerted and would be on the lookout in the spring.
In early May we got the answer. Keen naturalists like Sue Elliott reported fresh adults in West Haven and Terri Armata found them in Bennington. Soon, observations began to pour in from many areas west of the Green Mountains. The spring flight was successful and the second one in late summer and fall was even bigger. Once again Eastern Giant Swallowtails were seen fluttering across many areas of Vermont and once again, many reported caterpillars on prickly-ash as well as Gas Plant (Dictamnus albus), a common garden bush also used as a host. One person even reported them feeding on a lone potted citrus plant placed outside on a deck for the summer.
Now, over a decade later, the Eastern Giant Swallowtail is a regular resident butterfly in parts of Vermont and beyond—successfully breeding as far north as Montreal.
Thanks to the efforts of thousands of butterfly watchers reporting their sightings to projects such as iNaturalist.org and eButterfly.org, coupled with the massive biodiversity data being shared at the Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF), we were able to study in detail the rapid flight northward by Eastern Giant Swallowtails.
A recent study published in Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution by VCE and colleagues in the U.S., Canada, and France shows an unusually rapid northward range shift by the butterfly. Over the course of 18 years, the range of the Eastern Giant Swallowtail moved just over 200 miles north—a rate of expansion more than 27 times faster than the average organism.
“Butterflies are pretty mobile. The swallowtails we worked on are more on the mobile side of things,” said Keaton Wilson, who completed his postdoctoral research at the University of Arizona and is the lead author. “The tricky thing is they can move north, but they’re really restricted by their host plants.”
Our study brings together a combination of museum collection, survey, and community science data to understand how host plant availability, climate changes, and butterfly abundance are influencing the rapid expansion of a herbivorous insect as a case study. This study is one of few to demonstrate the interplay of both climate change and biotic interactions in shaping range limits while focusing on the ecologically important role of herbivores.
We amassed over 8,000 Eastern Giant Swallowtail occurrence records, nearly 2,700 host plant records, and TerraClimate data (monthly climate and climatic water balance data) from 1958-2019 for each ~4 kilometer area across the globe. Using these data with a powerful machine learning algorithm called MaxEnt, we modeled the ranges of the butterfly and its three native host plants during two time periods–prior to the beginning of the explosion northward (1959-1999) and the period when it began (2000-2018).
Our study found that recent climatic shifts, particularly warmer and wetter climate during the breeding season and warmer temperatures during the pupal overwintering season, have allowed the Eastern Giant Swallowtail to rapidly expand its range northward to now match or even surpass the slower moving northward range expansion of its northernmost host plant, Northern Prickly-ash. The range expansion of the swallowtail further northward is now limited by the host plant range, not climate.
Though sightings of adult giant swallowtails will likely continue to be seen further north than the naturally occurring host plant range, without a suitable host plant, further northward expansion is unlikely, but can occur in horticultural settings. Eastern Giant Swallowtail adults lay eggs and caterpillars feed on non-native plantings of Garden Rue (Ruta graveolens) and Gas Plant. Common Hoptree (Ptelea trifoliata), is increasingly planted as an ornamental in the Northeast yet is a native species from central and southeastern North America. Although these exotic plants are not distributed uniformly across the region, dispersing giant swallowtails have an uncanny ability to find even the smallest plantings, perhaps further enabling them to expand their range in urban and suburban areas as climatic conditions allow.
What other insect ranges are moving northward or upward in elevation? How are invasive insects spreading across the region? There is so much basic insect biogeography that we don’t know. There is a rapidly growing urgency to quantify and monitor changes in insect ranges from climate change and habitat loss for us to better manage and preserve the integrity of ecosystem function. This can only be fully accomplished using the power of community science recording our changing world across the landscape. Join a Vermont Atlas of Life project and help us discover biodiversity.
Source publication: Wilson J. Keaton, Casajus Nicolas, Hutchinson Rebecca A., McFarland Kent P., Kerr Jeremy T., Berteaux Dominique, Larrivée Maxim, Prudic Kathleen L. (2021). Climate Change and Local Host Availability Drive the Northern Range Boundary in the Rapid Expansion of a Specialist Insect Herbivore, Papilio cresphontes. Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution 9:85. https://doi.org/10.3389/fevo.2021.579230