Dual-sex butterfly hatches at Natural History Museum

Dual-sex butterfly hatches at Natural History Museum
This rare dual-sex butterfly hatched at the Museum's Sensational Butterflies exhibition in July 2011

A rare half-male and half-female butterfly has emerged at the Natural History Museum's Sensational Butterflies exhibition.

The butterfly is a pure bilateral gynandromorph. One half of the butterfly is female, with paler colouring and flecks of blue, red and tortoiseshell. The other half is male, with darker coloring.

and have a short , but visitors who are quick may be lucky enough to see it in the butterfly house on the Museum's front lawn.

A gynandromorph

Gynandromorphy happens very rarely across a range of species, from to . Gyn is Greek for female and andro is Greek for male. 

Insects can become gynandromorphs if the sex chromosomes do not properly separate during division of a fertilized egg.

Bilateral gynandromorphy results if this error occurs during the first cell division, resulting in an insect that has male cells on one side and female cells on the other.

If such errors occur later in development, the gynandromorphy is mosaic and the separation into the two sexes isn't so clearly defined.

Gynandromorphy can also occur when an egg with two sex chromosomes, instead of the normal one, gets fertilized by two sperm.

"Pure bilateral gynandromorphs are incredibly rare, and I have only ever come across 3 in my whole career of 30 years," says Luke Brown, butterfly house manager.

"Many permanent butterfly exhibitions will go through their entire existence without ever seeing one of these rarities."

Blanca Huertas, curator of butterflies at Museum, says, "The gynandromorph butterfly is a fascinating scientific phenomenon, and is the product of complex evolutionary processes. It is fantastic to have discovered one hatching on Museum grounds, particularly as they are so rare."

Great mormon

This butterfly is a great mormon, Papilio memnon, from Asia. "The female can appear in various forms for example with or without a club tail," says Luke. 

Butterflies and moths at the Museum

Of the 9 million butterflies and moths (4.5 million of which are butterflies) looked after at the Museum, only 200 are gynandromorphs. 

When this butterfly dies, it will be added to the Museum’s world class Lepidoptera collection, which is studied by scientists all over the world by extinction.

Butterflies of the world

Worldwide, there are 18,000 to 20,000 species of butterfly. However, there are many more still undiscovered or not scientifically named yet and sadly many are threatened of extinction.

Sensational Butterflies exhibition

Butterfly senses are the theme for this year’s Sensational Butterflies , open until 11 September. As well as hundreds of live tropical butterflies, the 5 sensory zones explore fascinating facts such as how butterflies sense sound without ears

Citation: Dual-sex butterfly hatches at Natural History Museum (2011, July 13) retrieved 28 March 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2011-07-dual-sex-butterfly-hatches-natural-history.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Explore further

British butterflies need summer boost

0 shares

Feedback to editors