This small white butterfly Pieris rapae took about twenty minutes to lay its cluster of eggs on the underside of some broccoli leaves in our garden. Each egg as laid with slow painstaking precision, at the rate of roughly one every twenty seconds. After laying each egg the butterfly withdrew its abdomen back between its wings, then bent it downwards and deposited another. Butterfly eggs have beautifully sculptured chitinous shells and as hatching nears they become more transparent, so that you can see the larva wriggling inside. After hatching, the caterpillar’s first act is to each its own egg.
This is a blog about the miniature world that can only be explored with the aid of a microscope.
Copyright Notice: Copyright of all photographs on this blog resides with Phil Gates. Students and teachers are welcome to use any of these photographs for non-commercial educational purposes free of charge, provided that their source is acknowledged by quoting the URL of this blog. The size and resolution of most pictures should be fine for PPT presentations.