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Thursday, June 23, 2011

Five Endangered Butterflies: Mission Blue



The Five Endangered Butterfly prints tell the stories of the butterflies, and represent similar stories of imperiled butterflies across the globe. Each image contains three aspects of the butterfly’s life history: The butterfly in adult form, the geography of the region in which it currently lives, and the particular host plant(s) that the females lay their eggs on for the caterpillars to consume. Most butterfly species depend on a very narrow diet for the caterpillars, and the landscape provides the habitat for the ecosystem. In the case of endangered butterflies, the ecology and life history are so interdependent that human impacts are often the cause of their peril.

There are 17 federally listed endangered butterflies from five taxonomic families in the US. The “family” is the level of classification above the genus and species of an organism. These five endangered butterfly prints are representatives of the five families of butterflies. They are all linoleum relief prints on Rives Lightweight Paper, 115gsm.


The Endangered Butterfly print project began with the Mission Blue. Daniel Dancer, a conceptual artist asked me to create a t-shirt design for an “Art for the Sky” collaboration at Presidio Middle School in San Francisco, CA. (Aerial photo credit: Michael Maloney, SF Chronicle.) After completing the commission for Daniel, I felt like the Mission Blue's story was only part of the message I wanted to send out. So, I created a series of prints that represent butterflies of the five families.

THE MISSION BLUE STORY:
Mission Blue belongs to the family Lycaenidae— Eight of the seventeen federally listed butterflies belong to Lycaenidae, or the “gossamer wings.” The subfamily of “blues” are generally small, delicate butterflies that use legumes as host plants. The largest population of mission blues live in the San Bruno Mountains near San Francisco. Other small populations exist in other locations in Marin, San Mateo and San Francisco counties. The topographic lines in the background of the print represent the coastal San Bruno Mountains. The females lay their eggs on silverleaf lupine, which is on either side of the butterfly. This image was made from three color blocks.

This is the first of five blogs describing the Five Endangered Butterflies series. These prints are available for sale as a set of five, only, and are not sold separately.

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